International audienceIn this paper, we consider recurrent events with competing risks in the presence of a terminal event and a censorship. We focus our attention on the mean functions which give the expected number of events of a specific type that have occurred up to a time t. Using heuristics from empirical likelihood theory, we propose a method to build simultaneous (in t) confidence regions for these functions. To establish the consistency of this estimation method (as well as its bootstrap calibration), we prove a weak convergence (as stochastic processes) of the associated empirical likelihood ratio processes. Our approach almost entirely relies on empirical process methods. In the proofs, we also establish some results in empirical...
In semi-competing risks one considers a terminal event, such as death of a person, and a non-termina...
The competing risks too arise when one type of event may affect the probability of occurrence of oth...
In biomedical research and lifetime data analysis, the comparison of two hazard functions usually pl...
International audienceIn this paper, we consider recurrent events with competing risks in the presen...
In this paper, we consider recurrent events with competing risks in the presence of a term...
We consider a data set on nosocomial infections of patients hospitalized in a French intensive care ...
Several methods of constructing confidence intervals for the median survival time of a recurrent eve...
Disposant d’un jeu de données sur des infections nosocomiales, nous utilisons des techniques de vrai...
We study models for recurrent events with special emphasis on the situation where a terminal event a...
We investigate the construction of various confidence bands for quantiles of the time between event ...
This thesis deals with competing risks and recurrent events. In the competing risks model, the inter...
This paper develops empirical likelihood based simultaneous confidence bands for differences and rat...
This paper develops empirical likelihood based simultaneous confidence bands for differences and rat...
Recurrent events are often encountered in clinical and epidemiological studies where a terminal even...
In this paper a simple way to obtain empirical likelihood type confidence intervals for the mean und...
In semi-competing risks one considers a terminal event, such as death of a person, and a non-termina...
The competing risks too arise when one type of event may affect the probability of occurrence of oth...
In biomedical research and lifetime data analysis, the comparison of two hazard functions usually pl...
International audienceIn this paper, we consider recurrent events with competing risks in the presen...
In this paper, we consider recurrent events with competing risks in the presence of a term...
We consider a data set on nosocomial infections of patients hospitalized in a French intensive care ...
Several methods of constructing confidence intervals for the median survival time of a recurrent eve...
Disposant d’un jeu de données sur des infections nosocomiales, nous utilisons des techniques de vrai...
We study models for recurrent events with special emphasis on the situation where a terminal event a...
We investigate the construction of various confidence bands for quantiles of the time between event ...
This thesis deals with competing risks and recurrent events. In the competing risks model, the inter...
This paper develops empirical likelihood based simultaneous confidence bands for differences and rat...
This paper develops empirical likelihood based simultaneous confidence bands for differences and rat...
Recurrent events are often encountered in clinical and epidemiological studies where a terminal even...
In this paper a simple way to obtain empirical likelihood type confidence intervals for the mean und...
In semi-competing risks one considers a terminal event, such as death of a person, and a non-termina...
The competing risks too arise when one type of event may affect the probability of occurrence of oth...
In biomedical research and lifetime data analysis, the comparison of two hazard functions usually pl...