A d-statistic tests the null hypothesis of no treatment effect in a matched, nonrandomized study of the effects caused by treatments. A d-statistic focuses on subsets of matched pairs that demonstrate insensitivity to unmeasured bias in such an observational study, correcting for double-use of the data by conditional inference. This conditional inference can, in favorable circumstances, substantially increase the power of a sensitivity analysis (Rosenbaum (2010) <doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-1213-8_14>). There are two examples, one concerning unemployment from Lalive et al. (2006) <doi:10.1111/j.1467-937X.2006.00406.x>, the other concerning smoking and periodontal disease from Rosenbaum (2017) <doi:10.1214/17-STS621>.
Version: | 1.0.4 |
Imports: | stats |
Published: | 2019-04-16 |
Author: | Paul R. Rosenbaum |
Maintainer: | Paul R. Rosenbaum <rosenbaum at wharton.upenn.edu> |
License: | GPL-2 |
NeedsCompilation: | no |
CRAN checks: | dstat results |
Reference manual: | dstat.pdf |
Package source: | dstat_1.0.4.tar.gz |
Windows binaries: | r-devel: dstat_1.0.4.zip, r-release: dstat_1.0.4.zip, r-oldrel: dstat_1.0.4.zip |
macOS binaries: | r-release: dstat_1.0.4.tgz, r-oldrel: dstat_1.0.4.tgz |
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