Legend:
CC = Baltimore Convention Center,
H = Hilton Baltimore
* = applied session ! = JSM meeting theme
251
Mon, 7/31/2017,
2:00 PM -
2:45 PM
CC-Halls A&B
SPEED: Biometrics — Contributed Poster Presentations
Biometrics Section
Chair(s): Jessi Cisewski, Yale University
The Speed portion will take place during Session 214527
19:
Relative Efficiency of Unequal Versus Equal Cluster Sizes in Cluster Randomized Trials Using Generalized Estimating Equation Models
—
Esther Lu, Washington University School of Medicine
20:
Selecting Classification Types for Time-Dependent Covariates to Improve the Marginal Analysis of Longitudinal Data
—
I-Chen Chen, University of Kentucky ; Philip M. Westgate, University of Kentucky
21:
Kernel-Based Bayesian Model for Genomic Selection
—
Xiaowei Hu, Oklahoma State University ; charles chen, oklahoma state university ; lan zhu, oklahoma state university
22:
Smoothing Splines Approach for Longitudinal Analysis of Functional Outcomes
—
Kush Kapur, Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School ; Rajesh Selukar, SAS Institute Inc ; Basil Darras, Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School ; Seward Rutkove, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School
23:
Model Comparison for Hip Fracture Patients Hospital Readmission Prediction
—
Qingqing Dai, Oklahoma State University ; Zhuqi Miao, Oklahoma State University ; lan zhu, oklahoma state university ; Scott Shepherd, Oklahoma State University ; William Paiva, Oklahoma State University
24:
Combining Biomarkers for Risk Prediction Using Approximated Rank Correlation Statistic with Censored Survival Data
—
Eisuke Inoue, Medical Informatics, St. Marianna University School of Medicine
25:
High-Dimensional Mediation Analysis of the Effect of Varenicline on Alcohol Consumption in Mice
—
John J. Dziak, Penn State University ; Arielle Deutsch, Penn State University ; Runze Li, The Pennsylvania State University ; Helen M. Kamens, Penn State University
26:
Informative Group Testing for Multiplex Assays
—
Christopher Bilder, University of Nebraska-Lincoln ; Joshua Tebbs, University of South Carolina ; Christopher McMahan, Clemson University
27:
Impact of Covariate Measurement Error on Failure Time Analysis in the Presence of Competing Risks
—
Carrie Caswell, University of Pennsylvania ; Sharon X. Xie, University of Pennsylvania
28:
Comparison of Treatment Regime Estimation Methods Incorporating Variable Selection: Lessons from a Large Simulation Study
—
Adam Ciarleglio, Columbia ; Eva Petkova, New York University School of Medicine ; Thaddeus Tarpey, Wright State University ; Zhe Su, New York University School of Medicine ; R. Todd Ogden, Department of Biostatistics, Columbia University
29:
A Semiparametric Latent Trait Model for Multiple Mixed Continuous, Binary and Ordinal Outcomes
—
Sophie Yu-Pu Chen, University of Michigan ; Alex Tsodikov, University of Michigan
30:
Consistent Estimator for Logistic Random Effect Model
—
Yizheng Wei ; Yanyuan Ma, Penn State University ; Tanya P Garcia, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics Texas A&M Health Science Center ; Samiran Sinha, Department of Statistics, Texas A&M University
31:
Increasing Precision and Removing Conditional Bias by Appropriate Adjustment for Baseline Variables in Randomized Trials
—
Bingkai Wang, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg SPH ; Michael Rosenblum, Johns Hopkins University
33:
Weighted Bayesian Random-Effects Meta-Analysis Models
—
Uma Siangphoe, U.S. Food and Drug Administration
34:
Time-to-event analysis when the event of interest is defined on a finite time interval and is subject to a competing risk
—
Catherine Lee ; Sebastien Haneuse, TE-Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
35:
A Procedure to Control for Population Stratification in Genome-Wide Association Studies with Rare Variants
—
Zhengyang Zhou, Southern Methodist University ; Chao Xing, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center ; Hung-Chih Ku, DePaul University
36:
Evaluating Accuracy of Diagnostic Tests with Empirical Methods
—
Di Lu, Georgetown University ; Ao Yuan, Georgetown University
37:
Association Test for Ordinal Categorical Outcome
—
Miao Zhang, University of Arizona ; Jin Zhou, University of Arizona ; Joseph Watkins, University of Arizona