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  2. Sensitivity analysis for observational studies: Looking back and…

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~qz280/talk/yale-biostats-2020-2/slides.pdf
    3 Jun 2024: The Reviewof Economics and Statistics, 92(4):882–898, 2010. doi:10.1162/REST a 00036. C. ... Biometrics, 69:803–811, 2013. G. W. Imbens. Sensitivity to exogeneity assumptions in program evaluation.American Economic Review, 93:126–132, 2003.
  3. ON BAYESIAN INFERENCE FOR SOME STATISTICAL INVERSEPROBLEMS WITH…

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~nickl/Site/__files/bnews.pdf
    6 Nov 2017: Identifying the functional param-eters f1,f2 from some observations in such a diffusionmodel is of fundamental importance in many appli-cations in modern science, e.g., in biology, physicsand economics. ... general, non-linear, inverse problems. In Ray
  4. 9. Lecture 10. Tests of homogeneity, and connections toconfidence ...

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/Dept/People/djsteaching/S1B-17-10-homogeneity-CIs.pdf
    20 Feb 2017: Tests of homogeneity, and connections to confidence intervals 10.1. Tests of homogeneity. ... Lecture 10. Tests of homogeneity, and connections to confidence intervals 2 (1–56).
  5. • Ingenia 29

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~frank/PAPERS/ingenia.pdf
    29 Dec 2006: What are the challenges and, in particular, whattechnology, economic and networkmodelling issues need to be overcome tomake it happen? ... of existing policy instrumentshave become apparent, and the economic damage ofcongestion is rapidly increasing.
  6. 0. Statistics 1B Statistics 1B 1 (1–1) 0. Lecture ...

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/Dept/People/djsteaching/S1B-16-all-lectures-4.pdf
    11 Jan 2016: Examples are spam filters, text and speech recognition, machine learning,bioinformatics, health economics and (some) clinical trials.
  7. John Michael Hammersley JOHN MICHAEL HAMMERSLEY21 March 1920 — ...

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~grg/papers/jmh_biom.pdf
    31 Aug 2007: He returned to Oxford in 1959 as Senior Research Officer at theInstitute of Economics and Statistics. ... be producedto order and if so how; can they be recognised and can we test that they are not im-posters?
  8. 8 Mar 2016: 22. 6.3 Optimal stopping over the infinite horizon. 23. 6.4 Example: sequential probability ratio test. ... 6516.2 Problems in which time appears explicitly. 6616.3 Example: monopolist. 6616.4 Example: neoclassical economic growth.
  9. 29 Nov 2014: 22. 6.3 Optimal stopping over the infinite horizon. 23. 6.4 Example: sequential probability ratio test. ... 6416.2 Problems in which time appears explicitly. 6516.3 Example: monopolist. 6516.4 Example: neoclassical economic growth.
  10. 22 May 2013: 22. 6.3 Optimal stopping over the infinite horizon. 22. 6.4 Sequential Probability Ratio Test. ... 6615.4 Problems in which time appears explicitly. 6615.5 Example: monopolist. 6715.6 Example: neoclassical economic growth.
  11. Probability About these notes. Many people have written excellent ...

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~rrw1/prob/prob-weber.pdf
    16 Sep 2019: Screening test.Simpson’s paradox. 6.1 Conditional probability. Suppose B is an event with P(B) > 0. ... However, the test yields a false positive rate of1% of the healthy persons tested.

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