Unequal allocation of sample/event sizes with considerations of sampling cost for testing equality, non-inferiority/superiority, and equivalence of two Poisson rates
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6590280
DOI10.1515/ijb-2022-0039MaRDI QIDQ6590280
Publication date: 21 August 2024
Published in: The International Journal of Biostatistics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Exact sample size determination for the ratio of two incidence rates under the Poisson distribution
- Sample size calculation for testing non-inferiority and equivalence under Poisson distribution
- A more powerful test for comparing two Poisson means
- Bioequivalence trials, intersection-union tests and equivalence confidence sets. With comments and a rejoinder by the authors
- Sample Sizes for Clinical Trials
- Optimal Allocation to Treatment Groups under Variance Heterogeneity
- Testing Statistical Hypotheses of Equivalence and Noninferiority
- APPROXIMATE SAMPLE SIZES FOR TESTING HYPOTHESES ABOUT THE RATIO AND DIFFERENCE OF TWO MEANS
- Sample size planning with the cost constraint for testing superiority and equivalence of two independent groups
- Sample size calculations for noninferiority trials with Poisson distributed count data
- A behavioural Bayes approach to the determination of sample size for clinical trials considering efficacy and safety: imbalanced sample size in treatment groups
- Testing the Ratio of Two Poisson Rates
- Sample Size Calculations in Clinical Research
- THE TIME INTERVALS BETWEEN INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENTS
- Testing two variances for superiority/non‐inferiority and equivalence: Using the exhaustion algorithm for sample size allocation with cost
- Implementing unequal randomization in clinical trials with heterogeneous treatment costs
- Imbalanced randomization in clinical trials
This page was built for publication: Unequal allocation of sample/event sizes with considerations of sampling cost for testing equality, non-inferiority/superiority, and equivalence of two Poisson rates