Understanding Inequalities in Cancer Survival Using Bayesian Machine Learning
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Cites work
- A Bayesian justification of Cox's partial likelihood
- A unifying framework for flexible excess hazard modelling with applications in cancer epidemiology
- Automated versus do-it-yourself methods for causal inference: lessons learned from a data analysis competition
- BART: Bayesian additive regression trees
- Bayesian Analysis of Binary and Polychotomous Response Data
- Bayesian regression tree ensembles that adapt to smoothness and sparsity
- Bayesian regression trees for high-dimensional prediction and variable selection
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- Log-linear Bayesian additive regression trees for multinomial logistic and count regression models
- Model Interpretation Through Lower-Dimensional Posterior Summarization
- Multi-dimensional penalized hazard model with continuous covariates: applications for studying trends and social inequalities in cancer survival
- Nonparametric failure time: time-to-event machine learning with heteroskedastic Bayesian additive regression trees and low information omnibus Dirichlet process mixtures
- Nonparametric inference for a family of counting processes
- Nonparametric survival analysis using Bayesian additive regression trees (BART)
- On estimation in relative survival
- Practical Bayesian model evaluation using leave-one-out cross-validation and WAIC
- Semiparametric analysis of clustered interval‐censored survival data using soft Bayesian additive regression trees (SBART)
- Semiparametric mixed-scale models using shared Bayesian forests
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