On using Lehmann alternatives with nonresponders
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1193123
DOI10.1016/0025-5564(92)90052-XzbMath0745.62100WikidataQ41121336 ScholiaQ41121336MaRDI QIDQ1193123
A. Nanthakumar, Mehdi Razzaghi
Publication date: 27 September 1992
Published in: Mathematical Biosciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
powerlocally most powerful testLehmann alternativedomain of attraction of a stable distributioncontrol scoredevelopment of a new drughypothesis of no treatment effectsum of independent Pareto random variablestesting for treatment effect
Related Items (2)
Risk Assessment for Quantitative Responses Using a Mixture Model ⋮ Mixture normal models in which the proportions of susceptibility are related to dose levels
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Locally Most Powerful Tests for Detecting Treatment Effects When Only a Subset of Patients Can Be Expected to "Respond" to Treatment
- Two-Sample Rank Tests for Detecting Changes That Occur in a Small Proportion of the Treated Population
- Tables of finite-mean nonsymmetric stable distributions as computed from their convergent and asymptotic series†
- Stable Distributions in Statistical Inference: 2. Information from Stably Distributed Samples
- Tables and graphs of the stable probability density functions
- On asymptotically optimal tests of composite hypotheses
- On the Sums of Independently Distributed Pareto Variates
- Stable Distributions in Statistical Inference: 1. Symmetric Stable Distributions Compared to Other Symmetric Long-Tailed Distributions
- APPROXIMATE CONFIDENCE INTERVALS
This page was built for publication: On using Lehmann alternatives with nonresponders