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Indirect inference for survival data.

Bruce W. Turnbull, Wenxin Jiang (2003)

SORT

In this paper we describe the so-called indirect method of inference, originally developed from the econometric literature, and apply it to survival analyses of two data sets with repeated events. This method is often more convenient computationally than maximum likelihood estimation when handling such model complexities as random effects and measurement error, for example; and it can also serve as a basis for robust inference with less stringent assumptions on the data generating mechanism. The...

Influence diagnostics in exponentiated-Weibull regression models with censored data.

Edwin M. M. Ortega, Vicente G. Cancho, Heleno Bolfarine (2006)

SORT

Diagnostic methods have been an important tool in regression analysis to detect anomalies, such as departures from the error assumptions and the presence of outliers and influential observations with the fitted models. The literature provides plenty of approaches for detecting outlying or influential observations in data sets. In this paper, we follow the local influence approach (Cook 1986) in detecting influential observations with exponentiated-Weibull regression models. The relevance of the...

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