Contributed Program
C1. Contributed Paper Session - Mon June 28th, 8:30AM - 10:15AM
Issues in Binary and Survival Data Analysis
Session Chair:
Speakers:
Stephen Shiboski, University of California San Francisco,
"Issues in the analysis of event times arising in case-control samples"
Susanne May, University of California San Diego, "Hosmer-Lemeshow type goodness-of-fit tests for the Cox proportional hazards model"
Reena Deutsch, University of California San Diego, "Testing significance of a cluster of multivariate items with binary outcomes"
Holly Janes,
Margaret Pepe, University of Washington, Seattle, "Adjusting for Covariate Effects in a Biomarker Study Using the Subject-Specific Threshold ROC Curve"
Coen Bernaards, AMC Cancer Research Center, "Robustness of a multivariate normal approximation for imputation of incomplete binary data"
C2. Contributed Paper Session - Tues June 29th, 8:30AM - 10:15AM
Spatiotemporal Data Analysis
Session Chair:
Speakers:
Geert Wenes,
The National Center for Genome Resources (NCGR), "Process Detection in Large, Noisy, and Incomplete Data: Stochastic Hybrid Dynamical Systems"
Margaret Short, Los Alamos National Labs, "Process convolution approach to reconstruction of binary fields"
Vera Bulaevskaya, Carnegie Mellon University, "A mixture model approach to assessing a neuron/muscle relationship"
Rachel Altman, University of Washington, Seattle, "Parameter-driven models for time series of count data"
Christiana Drake, University of California Davis, "Missing socio-economic status in the California cancer registry: How to adjust mortality rates."
C3. Contributed Paper Session - Tues June 29th, 10:30AM - 12:15PM
Bayesian Applications
Session Chair:
Speakers:
Raquel Prado, University of California, Santa Cruz, "Detecting positive selection in DNA sequences: a hierarchical model-based approach"
Paramjit Gill, Okanagan College, "Bayesian analysis of dyadic data"
Lurdes Inoue, University of Washington, Seattle, "Combining longitudinal studies of PSA"
Tim Hanson, University of New Mexico, "Bayesian Semiparametric Survival Analysis with Time Dependent Covariates"
C4. Contributed Paper Session - Tues June 29th, 1:45PM - 3:30PM
Longitudinal and Regression Models
Session Chair:
Speakers:
Jonathan Schildcrout, University of Washington, Seattle, "Outcome dependent sampling with longitudinal, binary response data"
Rema Raman, University of California San Diego, "A mixed-effects regression
model for multi-level ordinal data that allows heterogeneous variances"
D. Keith Williams, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, "A performance comparison of nonparametric versus generalized linear models
in longitudinal studies"
Loki Natarajan, University of California San Diego, "Measurement error models: an application to dietary data"
Oksana Shcherbak, Salford Systems, "An alternative methodology to linear regression and neural networks"
C5. Contributed Paper Session - Wed June 30th, 8:30AM - 10:15AM
Exploratory Data Analysis / Data Mining
Session Chair:
Speakers:
Shenghan Lai, Johns Hopkins University, "Examples in epidemiology using advanced data mining techniques"
Mikhail Golovnya, Salford Systems, "Advanced data mining techniques and how
to build and interpret TreeNet/MART and random forest models"
Chuan Zhou, University of Washington, Seattle, "A Bayesian hierarchical mixture model for curve clustering"
C6. Contributed Paper Session- Wed June 30th, 8:30AM - 10:15AM
Topics in Mathematical Statistics and Statistical Computing
Session Chair:
Speakers:
Sam Efromovich, University of New Mexico, "On blockwise wavelet estimation"
Hari Mukerjee, Wichita State University, "Statistical inferences for a decreasing mean residual life distribution"
Claudia Schmegner, Depaul University, "Principles of optimal sequential planning"
Jeffrey Pontius, Kansas State University, "Conditioning plots based on experimental designs"
Ahmad Reza Soltani, Kuwait University, "On threshold moving averages with
prescribed on target significance levels
C7. Contributed Paper Session- Wed June 30th, 10:30AM - 12:15PM
Ecological/Population Dynamics
Session Chair:
Speakers:
Christopher Williams, University of Idaho, "Estimation of fish disease prevalence from imperfect diagnostic tests"
Grace Chiu, University of Washington, Seattle, "Why SHIPSL?"
Ling Xu, University of New Mexico, "Detecting multimodality in ecological data"
Wayne W. Chen, Minnesota State University Moorhead, "Parasite population dynamics in Malaria"
|