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Academic Journal
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Academic Journal

Authors: BISBEE, JAMES1 (AUTHOR) james.bisbee@nyu.edu

Superior Title: American Political Science Review. Nov2019, Vol. 113 Issue 4, p1060-1065. 6p.

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Academic Journal

Contributors: The University of Newcastle. Faculty of Health & Medicine, Research Centre for Generational Health and Ageing

Relation: Annals of Actuarial Science Vol. 13, Issue 1, p. 1-35; http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1414486; uon:36753

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Academic Journal
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Academic Journal

Authors: Lopez, Olivier1 (AUTHOR), Milhaud, Xavier2 (AUTHOR) xavier.milhaud@univ-lyon1.fr, Thérond, Pierre-E.3 (AUTHOR)

Superior Title: Astin Bulletin. Sep2019, Vol. 49 Issue 3, p741-762. 22p.

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Academic Journal

File Description: application/pdf

Relation: Tan, Yaoyuan Vincent; Flannagan, Carol A. C.; Pool, Lindsay R.; Elliott, Michael R. (2021). "Accounting for selection bias due to death in estimating the effect of wealth shock on cognition for the Health and Retirement Study." Statistics in Medicine 40(11): 2613-2625.; https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/167825; Statistics in Medicine; Frangakis CE, Rubin DB. Principal stratification in causal inference. Biometrics. 2002; 58 ( 1 ): 21 ‐ 29.; Lee Y, Back JH, Kim J, et al. Systematic review of health behavioral risks and cognitive health in older adults. Int Psychogeriatr. 2010; 22 ( 2 ): 174 ‐ 187.; Plassman BL, Williams JW Jr, Burke JR, Holsinger T, Benjamin S. Systematic review: factors associated with risk for and possible prevention of cognitive decline in later life. Ann Intern Med. 2010; 153 ( 3 ): 182 ‐ 193.; Krieger N. Theories for social epidemiology in the 21st century: an eco‐social perspective. Int J Epidemiol. 2001; 30 ( 4 ): 668 ‐ 677.; Butrica BA, Smith KE, Toder EJ. What the 2008 stock market crash means for retirement security. J Aging Soc Policy. 2010; 22 ( 4 ): 339 ‐ 359.; Shrira A, Palgi Y, Ben‐Ezra M, Spalter T, Kavé G, Shmotkin D. For better and for worse: the relationship between future expectations and functioning in the second half of life. J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2011; 66 ( 2 ): 195 ‐ 203.; Sonnega A, Faul JD, Ofstedal MB, Langa KM, Phillips JW, Weir DR. Cohort profile: the health and retirement study (HRS). Int J Epidemiol. 2014; 43 ( 2 ): 576 ‐ 585.; Rosenbaum PR, Rubin DB. The central role of the propensity score in observational studies for causal effects. Biometrika. 1983; 70 ( 1 ): 41 ‐ 55.; Imbens GW, Rubin DB. Causal Inference for Statistical, Social, and Biomedical Sciences: An Introduction. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press; 2015.; Robins JM, Hernán MA, Brumback B. Marginal structural models and causal inference in epidemiology. Epidemiology. 2000; 11 ( 5 ): 550 ‐ 560.; Zhou T, Elliott MR, Little RJA. Penalized spline of propensity methods for treatment comparison. J Am Stat Assoc. 2019; 114 ( 525 ): 1 ‐ 19.; Weuve J, Tchetgen Tchetgen EJ, Glymour MM, et al. Accounting for bias due to selective attrition: the example of smoking and cognitive decline. Epidemiology. 2012; 23: 119 ‐ 128.; Chaix B, Evans D, Merlo J, Suzuki E. Commentary: weighing up the dead and missing: reflections on inverse probability weighting and principal stratification to address truncation by death. Epidemiology. 2012; 23 ( 1 ): 129 ‐ 131.; Neyman J. On the two different aspects of the representative method: the method of stratified sampling and the method of purposive selection. J R Stat Soc. 1934; 97 ( 4 ): 558 ‐ 625.; Rubin DB. Estimating causal effects of treatments in randomized and nonrandomized studies. J Educ Psychol. 1974; 66 ( 5 ): 688 ‐ 701.; Elliott MR, Joffe MM, Chen Z. A potential outcomes approach to developmental toxicity analyses. Biometrics. 2006; 62 ( 2 ): 352 ‐ 360.; Pool LR, Burgard SA, Needham BL, Elliott MR, Langa KM, Leon CFM. Association of a negative wealth shock with all‐cause mortality in middle‐aged and older adults in the united states. J Am Med Assoc. 2018; 319 ( 13 ): 1341 ‐ 1350.; Zhang G, Little RJA. Extensions of the penalized spline of propensity prediction method of imputation. Biometrics. 2009; 65: 911 ‐ 918.; Chipman HA, George EI, McCulloch RE. BART: Bayesian additive regression trees. Ann Appl Stat. 2010; 4 ( 1 ): 266 ‐ 298.; Tan YV, Flannagan CAC, Elliott MR. “ Robust‐squared” imputation models using BART. Journal of Survey Statistics and Methodology. 2019; 7 ( 4 ): 465 ‐ 497.; Heitjan D, Little RJA. Multiple imputation for the fatal accident reporting system. Appl Stat. 1991; 40: 13 ‐ 29.; Juster FT, Smith JP. Improving the quality of economic data: lessons from the HRS and AHEAD. J Am Stat Assoc. 1997; 92 ( 440 ): 1268 ‐ 1278.; Pool LR, Needham BL, Burgard SA, Elliott MR, Leon CFM. Negative wealth shock and short‐term changes in depressive symptoms and medication adherence among late middle‐aged adults. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2017; 71: 758 ‐ 763.; Crimmins EM, Kim JK, Langa KM, Weir DR. Assessment of cognition using surveys and neuropsychological assessment: the health and retirement study and the aging, demographics and memory study. J Gerontol Ser B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2011; 66 ( Suppl 1 ): 162 ‐ 171.; Korn EL, Graubard BI. Examples of differing weighted and unweighted estimates from a sample survey. Am Stat. 1995; 49 ( 3 ): 291 ‐ 295.

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Academic Journal

Authors: Loisel, Stéphane1 (AUTHOR) stephane.loisel@univ-lyon1.fr, Piette, Pierrick2 (AUTHOR) pierrickpiette@gmail.com, Tsai, Cheng-Hsien Jason3 (AUTHOR) ctsai@nccu.edu.tw

Superior Title: Astin Bulletin. Sep2021, Vol. 51 Issue 3, p839-871. 33p.