PIMS UNBC Distinguished Speaker Series: Linqun Wang
Topic
Some Statistical Issues in the Regression Analysis with Indirectly or Imprecisely Measured Variables
Speakers
Details
Many scientific research problems are concerned with relationships among a group of variables. In real data analysis often some of these variables cannot be directly or precisely measured, and instead indirect or imprecise measurements have to be used. Examples in health and environmental sciences include long-term systolic blood pressure, cholesterol level, drug concentration in patient's blood pressure, cholesterol level, drug concentration in patient's blood, exposure to air pollutants or radioactive substances. The measurement error problem arises also in econometrics, psychology and other social sciences. It is well-known that the naive statistical methods ignoring measurement error gives to biased estimates and therefore misleading conclusions. In this talk, I will first show some examples of measurement error and demonstrate its impact in simple linear regression models. I'll then give a brief survey of simple methods and techniques for correcting the measurement error effects. In particular, I will introduce the instrumental variable (IV) approach and apply this method to some real data examples.
Additional Information
Location: 7-238 Weldwood Theatre, Prince George Campus
2013 is the Year of Statistics (www.Statistics2013.org) and the Year of Mathematics of Planet Earth (www.MPE2013.org).
Dr. Linqun Wang, Department of Statistics, University of Manitoba
This is a Past Event
Event Type
Scientific, Distinguished Lecture
Date
January 24, 2013
Time
-
Location