The sensitivity of linear regression coefficients' confidence limits to the omission of a confounder
From MaRDI portal
Publication:993258
DOI10.1214/09-AOAS315zbMath1194.62089arXiv0905.3463MaRDI QIDQ993258
Paul W. Holland, Ben B. Hansen, Carrie A. Hosman
Publication date: 10 September 2010
Published in: The Annals of Applied Statistics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/0905.3463
Linear regression; mixed models (62J05) Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis (62P10) Point estimation (62F10) Medical applications (general) (92C50)
Related Items (25)
False discovery rate control for effect modification in observational studies ⋮ Reversals of Least-Square Estimates and Model-Invariant Estimation for Directions of Unique Effects ⋮ Subclassification estimation of the weighted average treatment effect ⋮ Testing Weak Nulls in Matched Observational Studies ⋮ Regression analysis of unmeasured confounding ⋮ An exact adaptive test with superior design sensitivity in an observational study of treatments for ovarian cancer ⋮ Assessing Sensitivity to Unconfoundedness: Estimation and Inference ⋮ The general structure of evidence factors in observational studies ⋮ Stronger instruments via integer programming in an observational study of late preterm birth outcomes ⋮ Evaluating costs with unmeasured confounding: a sensitivity analysis for the treatment effect ⋮ Matching for balance, pairing for heterogeneity in an observational study of the effectiveness of for-profit and not-for-profit high schools in Chile ⋮ Case Definition and Design Sensitivity ⋮ Calibrating Sensitivity Analyses to Observed Covariates in Observational Studies ⋮ Assessment of the extent of corroboration of an elaborate theory of a causal hypothesis using partial conjunctions of evidence factors ⋮ Effect Modification and Design Sensitivity in Observational Studies ⋮ Impact of Multiple Matched Controls on Design Sensitivity in Observational Studies ⋮ Isolation in the construction of natural experiments ⋮ Sensitivity analysis for stratified comparisons in an observational study of the effect of smoking on homocysteine levels ⋮ The sensitivity of linear regression coefficients' confidence limits to the omission of a confounder ⋮ The cross-cut statistic and its sensitivity to bias in observational studies with ordered doses of treatment ⋮ Clustered Treatment Assignments and Sensitivity to Unmeasured Biases in Observational Studies ⋮ Weighted M-statistics With Superior Design Sensitivity in Matched Observational Studies With Multiple Controls ⋮ Extended sensitivity analysis for heterogeneous unmeasured confounding with an application to sibling studies of returns to education ⋮ Alternative sensitivity analyses for regression estimates of treatment effects to unobserved confounding in binary and survival data ⋮ Reinforced Designs: Multiple Instruments Plus Control Groups as Evidence Factors in an Observational Study of the Effectiveness of Catholic Schools
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Causal inference through potential outcomes and principal stratification: application to studies with ``censoring due to death
- Covariate balance in simple, stratified and clustered comparative studies
- The sensitivity of linear regression coefficients' confidence limits to the omission of a confounder
- Bayesian inference for causal effects: The role of randomization
- Amplification of Sensitivity Analysis in Matched Observational Studies
- Generalized Additive Selection Models for the Analysis of Studies with Potentially Nonignorable Missing Outcome Data
- Sensitivity Analysis for Instrumental Variables Regression With Overidentifying Restrictions
- Sensitivity analysis for matching with multiple controls
- Dual and simultaneous sensitivity analysis for matched pairs
- Assessing the Sensitivity of Regression Results to Unmeasured Confounders in Observational Studies
- Observational studies.
This page was built for publication: The sensitivity of linear regression coefficients' confidence limits to the omission of a confounder