Strong approximations for dependent competing risks with independent censoring
From MaRDI portal
Publication:619083
DOI10.1007/s11749-008-0113-yzbMath1203.62171MaRDI QIDQ619083
Publication date: 22 January 2011
Published in: Test (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11749-008-0113-y
rate of convergence; strong approximation; Aalen-Johansen estimator; right-censoring; dependent competing risks
62G20: Asymptotic properties of nonparametric inference
62N01: Censored data models
62G30: Order statistics; empirical distribution functions
60F15: Strong limit theorems
62N02: Estimation in survival analysis and censored data
Related Items
Maximum likelihood estimator for cumulative incidence functions under proportionality con\-straint, Strong approximations for dependent competing risks with independent censoring, Uniform convergence of nonparametric regressions in competing risk models with right censoring, Extreme value statistics for censored data with heavy tails under competing risks
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Strong approximations for dependent competing risks with independent censoring
- A correction to and improvement of: ``Strong approximations of some biometric estimates under random censorship
- Confidence bands for the Kaplan-Meier survival curve estimate
- Strong and weak representations of cumulative hazard function and Kaplan- Meier estimators on increasing sets
- Universal Gaussian approximations under random censorship
- Laws of the iterated logarithm for censored data
- \(U\)-statistic processes: A martingale approach
- Confidence bands from censored samples
- An approximation of partial sums of independent RV'-s, and the sample DF. I
- The law of the iterated logarithm for normalized empirical distribution function
- Limit theorems for the ratio of the empirical distribution function to the true distribution function
- On consistency of kernel density estimators for randomly censored data: Rates holding uniformly over adaptive intervals
- New concentration inequalities in product spaces