Mindel C. Cheps: Counted, dead or alive

11/18/2022
by   Anders Huitfeldt, et al.
0

In the 1958 paper "Shall we count the living or the dead", Canadian physician and biostatistician Mindel C. Sheps proposed a novel approach to choice of effect measure, which resolves key theoretical shortcomings of relative risk models. Sheps' insights have been independently rediscovered multiple times in different academic disciplines, and her approach is consistent with influential work on mechanism of action from toxicology, as well as work on causal generalizability from the psychology and philosophy literature

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

page 5

page 6

page 7

page 8

research
06/11/2021

Shall we count the living or the dead?

In the 1958 paper "Shall we count the living or the dead", Mindel C. She...
research
10/30/2018

The combined effects of age and seniority on research performance of full professors

In this work we examine the relationship between research performance, a...
research
05/15/2021

Disagreement Concerning Effect-Measure Modification

Stratifying factors, like age and gender, can modify the effect of treat...
research
06/15/2018

The choice to define competing risk events as censoring events and implications for causal inference

In failure-time settings, a competing risk event is any event that makes...
research
01/06/2022

Predicting Trust Using Automated Assessment of Multivariate Interactional Synchrony

Diverse disciplines are interested in how the coordination of interactin...
research
01/14/2020

Nudge for Deliberativeness: How Interface Features Influence Online Discourse

Cognitive load is a significant challenge to users for being deliberativ...
research
08/09/2023

Evaluating the Generation Capabilities of Large Chinese Language Models

This paper presents CG-Eval, the first comprehensive evaluation of the g...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset