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The Theory of Response-Adaptive Randomization in Clinical Trials is the result of the authors' ten-year collaboration as well as their collaborations with other researchers in investigating the important questions regarding response-adaptive randomization in a rigorous mathematical framework. Response-adaptive allocation has a long history in biostatistics literature; however, largely due to the disastrous ECMO trial in the early 1980s, there is a general reluctance to use these procedures.
This timely book represents a mathematically rigorous subdiscipline of experimental design involving randomization and answers fundamental questions, including:
The answers to these questions communicate a thorough understanding of the asymptotic properties of each procedure discussed, including asymptotic normality, consistency, and asymptotic variance of the induced allocation. Topical coverage includes:
Useful for graduate students in mathematics, statistics, and biostatistics as well as researchers and industrial and academic biostatisticians, this book offers a rigorous treatment of the subject in order to find the optimal procedure to use in practice.
WILLIAM F. ROSENBERGER, PhD, is Professor and Chair of the Department of Applied and Engineering Statistics at George Mason University. He received the Association of American Publishers' Professional/Scholarly Publishing Award in 2002 for his coauthored work, Randomization in Clinical Trials: Theory And Practice (Wiley). A Fellow of the American Statistical Association, he has authored over fifty refereed articles and edited two monographs.
| Publication Date: | 18 August 2006 |
| Publisher: | Wiley |
| Imprint: | Wiley-Interscience |
| ISBN-13: | 9780471653967 |
| Format: | Hardback |
| Page Count: | 232 |
| Weight (oz): | 16.48 |