Publication | Open Access
Semiparametric Methods for Response-Selective and Missing Data Problems in Regression
215
Citations
41
References
1999
Year
Parameter EstimationCovariate DistributionEngineeringCompare Semiparametric LikelihoodPseudolikelihood MethodsRegression AnalysisData ScienceBiostatisticsBayesian MethodsPublic HealthEstimation TheoryStatisticsBayesian Hierarchical ModelingEstimation StatisticEconometric MethodFunctional Data AnalysisMarginal Structural ModelsBayesian StatisticsRobust ModelingSemiparametric MethodsTime-varying ConfoundingStatistical InferenceSemi-nonparametric Estimation
Summary Suppose that data are generated according to the model f(y|x; θ) g(x), where y is a response and x are covariates. We derive and compare semiparametric likelihood and pseudolikelihood methods for estimating θ for situations in which units generated are not fully observed and in which it is impossible or undesirable to model the covariate distribution. The probability that a unit is fully observed may depend on y, and there may be a subset of covariates which is observed only for a subsample of individuals. Our key assumptions are that the probability that a unit has missing data depends only on which of a finite number of strata that (y, x) belongs to and that the stratum membership is observed for every unit. Applications include case–control studies in epidemiology, field reliability studies and broad classes of missing data and measurement error problems. Our results make fully efficient estimation of θ feasible, and they generalize and provide insight into a variety of methods that have been proposed for specific problems.
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