Comparison of three‐dimensional ROC surfaces for clustered and correlated markers, with a proteomics application
DOI10.1111/stan.12065OpenAlexW1837766663MaRDI QIDQ6063602
No author found.
Publication date: 12 December 2023
Published in: Statistica Neerlandica (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/stan.12065
cluster analysisROC surfacemulti-category classificationbiomarker evaluationcorrelated two-sample testvolume under ROC surface (VUS)
Nonparametric hypothesis testing (62G10) Classification and discrimination; cluster analysis (statistical aspects) (62H30) Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis (62P10) Diagnostics, and linear inference and regression (62J20)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- ROC analysis with multiple classes and multiple tests: methodology and its application in microarray studies
- Time-dependent diagnostic accuracy analysis with censored outcome and censored predictor
- Nonparametric and semiparametric estimation of the three way receiver operating characteristic surface
- Generalization of the theory of signal detectability to \(n\)-event \(m\)-dimensional forced-choice tasks.
- Multiple-event forced-choice tasks in the theory of signal detectability
- COMBINING MULTIPLE MARKERS FOR MULTI-CATEGORY CLASSIFICATION: AN ROC SURFACE APPROACH
- Comparing the Areas under Two or More Correlated Receiver Operating Characteristic Curves: A Nonparametric Approach
- A Unified Approach to Nonparametric Comparison of Receiver Operating Characteristic Curves for Longitudinal and Clustered Data
- A family of nonparametric statistics for comparing diagnostic markers with paired or unpaired data
- The Effect of Monte Carlo Approximation on Coverage Error of Double-Bootstrap Confidence Intervals
- Importance of Interpolation When Constructing Double-Bootstrap Confidence Intervals
- Applications of the Bootstrap in ROC Analysis
- A Parametric Comparison of Diagnostic Accuracy with Three Ordinal Diagnostic Groups
- Assessing diagnostic accuracy improvement for survival or competing‐risk censored outcomes
- A Note on Quantiles in Large Samples
- Statistical models based on counting processes
This page was built for publication: Comparison of three‐dimensional ROC surfaces for clustered and correlated markers, with a proteomics application