Results 281 to 290 of about 9,888,914 (330)
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Correcting for Survey Nonresponse Using Variable Response Propensity
Journal of the American Statistical Association, 2010All surveys with less than full response potentially suffer from nonresponse bias. Poststratification weights can only correct for selection into the sample based on observables whose distribution is known in the population. Variables such as gender, race, income, and region satisfy this requirement because they are available from the U.S.
Michael Peress
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Does the choice of link function matter in response propensity modelling?
Model Assisted Statistics and Applications, 2006Response propensity models are currently often used in survey research when predicting the response behaviour and then adjusting for biases due to non-response. Such a model yields the propensity scores or the predicted response probabilities both for the respondents and non-respondents.
S. Laaksonen
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Jouni Kuha, Irini Moustaki
exaly +2 more sources
Socio‐demographical antecedents of responsible consumerism propensity
International Journal of Consumer Studies, 2014AbstractThe paper analyses consumers’ propensity for socially and environmentally friendly products through socio‐demographic indicators. Although the topic has been object of a wide literature, most of the previous studies suffered from methodological or sampling limitations.
Pedrini, Matteo, Ferri, Laura Maria
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The multiple propensity score for analysis of dose-response relationships in drug safety studies
In order to detect adverse drug reactions, large observational drug safety studies are necessary as randomized clinical trials rarely have enough power.
Peter T Donnan +2 more
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Propensity to excessive proinflammatory response in chronic Lyme borreliosis
APMIS, 2007The clinical course of Lyme borreliosis is extremely variable. However, all the clinical manifestations, acute or chronic, are characterized by strong inflammation. Borrelia burgdorferi can induce the production of several proinflammatory and anti‐inflammatory cytokines.
Kai E, Kisand +5 more
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ANZ journal of surgery, 2019
Our propensity score‐matching (PSM) study evaluated the prognostic significance of systemic inflammation response index (SIRI) for patients undergoing video‐assisted thoracoscopic surgery lobectomy for non‐small‐cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
Shuangjiang Li +5 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Our propensity score‐matching (PSM) study evaluated the prognostic significance of systemic inflammation response index (SIRI) for patients undergoing video‐assisted thoracoscopic surgery lobectomy for non‐small‐cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
Shuangjiang Li +5 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Medical Care, 2003
Health services researchers are often interested in the effect of a treatment or a service in situations in which randomization is difficult or impossible. One useful alternative involves propensity score methods, a means for matching members of different groups based on a range of characteristics.
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Health services researchers are often interested in the effect of a treatment or a service in situations in which randomization is difficult or impossible. One useful alternative involves propensity score methods, a means for matching members of different groups based on a range of characteristics.
openaire +2 more sources
On national propensities to predatory publishing: A response to the comments of Mills and Bell
Scientometrics, 2021This note is a response to a letter entitled „National Propensities? “ by David Mills and Kirsten Bell that comments on our article on “Predatory publishing in Scopus: evidence on cross‑country differences”. We welcome their interest in our work but we do not find most of their opinions to be productive.
Martin Srholec, Vít Macháček
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Locomotor response to novelty predicts a rat's propensity to self-administer nicotine
Psychopharmacology, 2001A positive correlation between responding to novelty and propensity to subsequently self-administer a drug has been reported for opioids and psychomotor stimulants but remains to be investigated for nicotine.The possibility that locomotor responding to novelty can predict a rat's propensity to self-administer nicotine was therefore assessed.Rats ...
N, Suto, J D, Austin, P, Vezina
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