<div><p>Quantifying exposure-disease associations is a central issue in epidemiology. Researchers of a study often present an odds ratio (or a logarithm of odds ratio, logOR) estimate together with its confidence interval (CI), for each exposure they examined. Here the authors advocate using the empirical-Bayes-based ‘prediction intervals’ (PIs) to bound the uncertainty of logORs. The PI approach is applicable to a panel of factors believed to be exchangeable (no extra information, other than the data itself, is available to distinguish some logORs from the others). The authors demonstrate its use in a genetic epidemiological study on age-related macular degeneration (AMD). The proposed PIs can enjoy straightforward probabilistic interpreta...
Odds ratios are frequently used for estimating the effect of an exposure on the probability of disea...
A marker that is strongly associated with outcome (or disease) is often assumed to be effective for ...
Abstract. This paper argues that the use of the odds ratio parameter in epidemiology needs to be con...
Quantifying exposure-disease associations is a central issue in epidemiology. Researchers of a study...
<p>(A) The 95% confidence intervals (CIs) and (B) the 95% prediction intervals (PIs) of the natural ...
Genetic information can be used to improve disease risk estimation as well as to estimate the number...
Many researchers in the health field use the chi-square statistic to identify associations between v...
Calculating odds ratios and corresponding confidence intervals for exposures that have been measured...
Increased availability of data and accessibility of computational tools in recent years have created...
Kaufman et al. compute the 'excess risk' of a disease in the presence of an exposure as the product ...
From a public health perspective, measures of the strength of association between exposure to a susp...
Abstract Background This article describes classical and Bayesian interval estimation of genetic sus...
The double-sampling paradigm, which has become an important part of the epidemiological designs, inc...
The relative risk and odds ratio are widely used in many fields, including biomedical research, to c...
Medical studies often involve a comparison between two outcomes, each collected from a sample. The p...
Odds ratios are frequently used for estimating the effect of an exposure on the probability of disea...
A marker that is strongly associated with outcome (or disease) is often assumed to be effective for ...
Abstract. This paper argues that the use of the odds ratio parameter in epidemiology needs to be con...
Quantifying exposure-disease associations is a central issue in epidemiology. Researchers of a study...
<p>(A) The 95% confidence intervals (CIs) and (B) the 95% prediction intervals (PIs) of the natural ...
Genetic information can be used to improve disease risk estimation as well as to estimate the number...
Many researchers in the health field use the chi-square statistic to identify associations between v...
Calculating odds ratios and corresponding confidence intervals for exposures that have been measured...
Increased availability of data and accessibility of computational tools in recent years have created...
Kaufman et al. compute the 'excess risk' of a disease in the presence of an exposure as the product ...
From a public health perspective, measures of the strength of association between exposure to a susp...
Abstract Background This article describes classical and Bayesian interval estimation of genetic sus...
The double-sampling paradigm, which has become an important part of the epidemiological designs, inc...
The relative risk and odds ratio are widely used in many fields, including biomedical research, to c...
Medical studies often involve a comparison between two outcomes, each collected from a sample. The p...
Odds ratios are frequently used for estimating the effect of an exposure on the probability of disea...
A marker that is strongly associated with outcome (or disease) is often assumed to be effective for ...
Abstract. This paper argues that the use of the odds ratio parameter in epidemiology needs to be con...