The following pages link to Stephen Senn (Q194199):
Displaying 24 items.
- Creating a suite of macros for meta-analysis in SAS\(^{\circledR}\): a case study in collaboration (Q544647) (← links)
- A conversation with John Nelder. (Q1431226) (← links)
- Hans van Houwelingen and the art of summing up (Q2786154) (← links)
- A Chronicle of Permutation Statistical Methods: 1920–2000, and Beyond, by K J Berry, J E Johnston, and P J W Mielke (Q2818290) (← links)
- Estimating treatment effects in clinical crossover trials (Q4224605) (← links)
- Dicing with Death (Q4445268) (← links)
- Comment on Gelman and Shalizi (Q4614595) (← links)
- A Comment on Optimal Allocations for Bioequivalence Studies (Q4668359) (← links)
- Random main effects of treatment: A case study with a network meta‐analysis (Q4967104) (← links)
- Dicing with Death (Q5059667) (← links)
- ‘Equivalence is Different’ – Some Comments on Therapeutic Equivalence (Q5122598) (← links)
- Comment (Q5122615) (← links)
- An Early “Atkins' Diet”: RA Fisher Analyses a Medical “Experiment” (Q5122805) (← links)
- JOHN NELDER: FROM GENERAL BALANCE TO GENERALISED MODELS (BOTH LINEAR AND HIERARCHICAL) (Q5308474) (← links)
- Contribution to the discussion of ‘“A critical evaluation of the current <i>p</i>‐value controversy”’ (Q5364022) (← links)
- Statistical Issues in Drug Development (Q5445233) (← links)
- Cross-over trials in drug development: Theory and practice (Q5939490) (← links)
- Comment: ``Harold Jeffreys's \textit{Theory of probability} revisited'' (Q5966335) (← links)
- Comment on article by Gelman (Q5972119) (← links)
- On the relevance of prognostic information for clinical trials: A theoretical quantification (Q6149266) (← links)
- The statistical properties of RCTs and a proposal for shrinkage (Q6628316) (← links)
- A note regarding alternative explanations for heterogeneity in meta-analysis (Q6628576) (← links)
- Comment on: ``Target estimands for population-adjusted indirect comparisons'' (Q6629399) (← links)
- Statistics, philosophy, and health: the SMAC 2021 webconference (Q6636225) (← links)