Survival and Event History Analysis: A Process Point of View

Author:   Odd Aalen ,  Ornulf Borgan ,  Hakon Gjessing
Publisher:   Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
Edition:   2008 ed.
ISBN:  

9780387202877


Pages:   541
Publication Date:   12 August 2008
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Survival and Event History Analysis: A Process Point of View


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Author:   Odd Aalen ,  Ornulf Borgan ,  Hakon Gjessing
Publisher:   Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
Imprint:   Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
Edition:   2008 ed.
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.998kg
ISBN:  

9780387202877


ISBN 10:   0387202870
Pages:   541
Publication Date:   12 August 2008
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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From the reviews: The book is intended as a text for biostatistics graduate students. It will fill that role excellently. It will expose them to ideas they are unlikely to encounter in depth in a standard curriculum and is precisely the sort of book to inspire theses and other research projects. Prerequisites include exposure to stochastic processes and basic survival analysis, as well as the mathematical statistics that the standard graduate program provides. Each chapter contains relevant probability theory and data analyses and concludes with a set of exercises... With its comprehensive and up-to-date bibliography, and extensive index, it is also ideal for self-study.! The book has Springer's high quality with pleasing typesetting and good margins. (Patricia Grambsch, Biometrics, June 2009, 65) !typifies the authors' interest in understanding the mechanisms that underlie developments over times, as does the brilliant chapter on causality. In summary, Aalen, Borgan, and Gjessing have managed to write a book which is both practical and thought-provoking, wide-ranging yet focused, and above all, accessible. It will be around for a long time. (Robin Henderson, Significance, September 2009) Readership: Practicing statisticians as well as theoreticians interested in survival analysis. Also suitable for a graduate course. Very well written. ! Aalen, Borgan and Gjessing have written a new book which is also likely to have a profound influence on the subject, possibly both from the classical and Bayesian point of view ! . The book is based on point processes ! . Deep facts about these processes as well as martingales and stochastic integrals are introduced and used throughout with clarity and intuitive insight. (Jayanta K. Ghosh, International Statistical Review, Vol. 77 (3), 2009) This book intends to distinguish itself by presenting a broad and comprehensive view of stochastic processes which are useful for the analysis of survival data and, more generally, of 'event histories', i.e. series of occurrences of events over time. ! In conclusion, this is an excellent book which will be useful to researchers in several fields due to the broad interest of the presented methodologies ! . (Bruno Betro, Mathematical Reviews, Issue 2010 b) Inspired by the spread of survival and event history analysis to fields beyond biostatistics and by the increasing complexity of high-quality data structures, the authors have written an elegant text that bridges theory and applications and balances technical detail with pedagogical simplicity. The book moves beyond other textbooks on the topic of survival and event history analysis by using a stochastic processes framework to develop models for events repeated over time or related among individuals. ...Overall, the book is masterfully written and a welcome addition to the bookshelf of anyone doing either applied modeling or methodological research in survival or event history analysis. (Journal of the American Statistical Association, Vol. 105, No. 489)


"From the reviews: ""The book is intended as a text for biostatistics graduate students. It will fill that role excellently. It will expose them to ideas they are unlikely to encounter in depth in a standard curriculum and is precisely the sort of book to inspire theses and other research projects. Prerequisites include exposure to stochastic processes and basic survival analysis, as well as the mathematical statistics that the standard graduate program provides. Each chapter contains relevant probability theory and data analyses and concludes with a set of exercises.... With its comprehensive and up-to-date bibliography, and extensive index, it is also ideal for self-study.… The book has Springer’s high quality with pleasing typesetting and good margins."" (Patricia Grambsch, Biometrics, June 2009, 65) ""…typifies the authors’ interest in understanding the mechanisms that underlie developments over times, as does the brilliant chapter on causality. In summary, Aalen, Borgan, and Gjessing have managed to write a book which is both practical and thought-provoking, wide-ranging yet focused, and above all, accessible. It will be around for a long time."" (Robin Henderson, Significance, September 2009) ""Readership: Practicing statisticians as well as theoreticians interested in survival analysis. Also suitable for a graduate course. Very well written. … Aalen, Borgan and Gjessing have written a new book which is also likely to have a profound influence on the subject, possibly both from the classical and Bayesian point of view … . The book is based on point processes … . Deep facts about these processes as well as martingales and stochastic integrals are introduced and used throughout with clarity and intuitive insight."" (Jayanta K. Ghosh, International Statistical Review, Vol. 77 (3), 2009) “This book intends to distinguish itself by presenting a broad and comprehensive view of stochastic processes which are useful for the analysis of survivaldata and, more generally, of ‘event histories’, i.e. series of occurrences of events over time. … In conclusion, this is an excellent book which will be useful to researchers in several fields due to the broad interest of the presented methodologies … .” (Bruno Betrò, Mathematical Reviews, Issue 2010 b) “Inspired by the spread of survival and event history analysis to fields beyond biostatistics and by the increasing complexity of high-quality data structures, the authors have written an elegant text that bridges theory and applications and balances technical detail with pedagogical simplicity. The book moves beyond other textbooks on the topic of survival and event history analysis by using a stochastic processes framework to develop models for events repeated over time or related among individuals. …Overall, the book is masterfully written and a welcome addition to the bookshelf of anyone doing either applied modeling or methodological research in survival or event history analysis.” (Journal of the American Statistical Association, Vol. 105, No. 489)"


From the reviews: The book is intended as a text for biostatistics graduate students. It will fill that role excellently. It will expose them to ideas they are unlikely to encounter in depth in a standard curriculum and is precisely the sort of book to inspire theses and other research projects. Prerequisites include exposure to stochastic processes and basic survival analysis, as well as the mathematical statistics that the standard graduate program provides. Each chapter contains relevant probability theory and data analyses and concludes with a set of exercises... With its comprehensive and up-to-date bibliography, and extensive index, it is also ideal for self-study... The book has Springer's high quality with pleasing typesetting and good margins. (Patricia Grambsch, Biometrics, June 2009, 65) ...typifies the authors' interest in understanding the mechanisms that underlie developments over times, as does the brilliant chapter on causality. In summary, Aalen, Borgan, and Gjessing have managed to write a book which is both practical and thought-provoking, wide-ranging yet focused, and above all, accessible. It will be around for a long time. (Robin Henderson, Significance, September 2009) Readership: Practicing statisticians as well as theoreticians interested in survival analysis. Also suitable for a graduate course. Very well written. ... Aalen, Borgan and Gjessing have written a new book which is also likely to have a profound influence on the subject, possibly both from the classical and Bayesian point of view ... . The book is based on point processes ... . Deep facts about these processes as well as martingales and stochastic integrals are introduced and used throughout with clarity and intuitive insight. (Jayanta K. Ghosh, International Statistical Review, Vol. 77 (3), 2009) This book intends to distinguish itself by presenting a broad and comprehensive view of stochastic processes which are useful for the analysis of survival data and, more generally, of 'event histories', i.e. series of occurrences of events over time. ... In conclusion, this is an excellent book which will be useful to researchers in several fields due to the broad interest of the presented methodologies ... . (Bruno Betro, Mathematical Reviews, Issue 2010 b) Inspired by the spread of survival and event history analysis to fields beyond biostatistics and by the increasing complexity of high-quality data structures, the authors have written an elegant text that bridges theory and applications and balances technical detail with pedagogical simplicity. The book moves beyond other textbooks on the topic of survival and event history analysis by using a stochastic processes framework to develop models for events repeated over time or related among individuals. ...Overall, the book is masterfully written and a welcome addition to the bookshelf of anyone doing either applied modeling or methodological research in survival or event history analysis. (Journal of the American Statistical Association, Vol. 105, No. 489)


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