KPWHRI
Subscribe to newsletter
  • Our Research
    • Research Areas
      • Addictions
      • Aging & Geriatrics
      • Behavior Change
      • Biostatistics
      • Cancer
      • Cardiovascular Health
      • Child & Adolescent Health
      • Chronic Illness Management
      • Health Informatics
      • Health Services & Economics
      • Healthy Communities
      • Medication Use & Patient Safety
      • Mental Health
      • Obesity
      • Preventive Medicine
      • Social Determinants of Health
      • Vaccines & Infectious Diseases | COVID-19
    • Our Scientists
      • Adjunct Researchers
      • Affiliate Investigators
    • Collaborate with Us
    • Our Publications
    • Research Funding Sources
      • Grants Awarded
  • News and Events
    • Healthy Findings Blog
    • KPWHRI in the Media
    • Recent News
    • Events
    • KPWHRI Newsletter
      • Sign up for KPWHRI news
    • Recent videos
  • Get Involved
    • Be Part of a Study
    • Institutional Review Board
      • Should You Join a Study?
      • Protecting Your Privacy
  • About Us
    • KPWHRI Leadership
    • Career Opportunities
    • Capabilities
      • Research Clinic
      • Survey Research Program
      • Information Resources & Technologies
      • Research Communications
      • Learning Health System Program
  • Live Healthy
    • Top Topics
      • Back Pain
      • Healthy Aging
      • Healthy Weight
      • Mental Health
      • Quit Smoking
      • Vaccines

  Back to Biostatistics

Recent publications on Biostatistics

Miglioretti DL, Heagerty PJ. Marginal modeling of multilevel binary data with time varying covariates. Biostatistics. 2004;5(3):381-98. PubMed

Rutter CM, Simon G. A bayesian method for relating cross-sectional and longitudinal measures. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series C: Applied Statistics. 2004;53(2):341-53. PubMed

Brumback BA, Hernan MA, Haneuse SJ, Robins JM. Sensitivity analyses for unmeasured confounding assuming a marginal structural model for repeated measures. Stat Med. 2004;23(5):749-67 PubMed

Crane PK, van Belle G, Larson EB. Test bias in a cognitive test: differential item functioning in the CASI. Stat Med. 2004;23:241-56. PubMed

Miglioretti DL, Boatman D. Modeling variability in cortical representations of human complex sound perception. Exp Brain Res. 2003;153(3):382-387. PubMed

Miglioretti DL. Latent transition regression for mixed outcomes. Biometrics. 2003;59(3):710-20. PubMed

Rutter CM, Miglioretti DL. Estimating the accuracy of psychological scales using longitudinal data.  Biostatistics. 2003;4(1):97-107. PubMed

Motamedi GK, Lesser RP, Miglioretti DL, Mizuno-Matsumoto Y, Gordon B, Webber WRS, Jackson DC, Sepkuty JP, Crone NE. Optimizing parameters for terminating cortical afterdischarges with pulse stimulation. Epilepsia. 2002;43(8):836-46. PubMed

Miglioretti DL, McCulloch C, Zeger SL. Combining images across multiple subjects: a study of direct cortical electrical interference. J Am Stat Assoc. 2002;97(457):125-135. PubMed

Yanez ND III, Kronmal RA, Nelson JC, Alonzo TA. Analyzing change in clinical trials using quasi-likelihood. Journal of Applied Statistics. 2002;29(8):1135-1145. PubMed

  • ← Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24 (current)
  • 25
  • 26
  • 27
  • …
  • 32
  • Next →

Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute for:

  • Researchers & Collaborators
  • Health Professionals
  • Consumers & Patients
  • Study Participants
  • Media
  • Job Seekers

Our centers

  • Center for Accelerating Care Transformation
  • Center for Community Health and Evaluation

Affiliated organizations

  • Kaiser Permanente
  • Kaiser Permanente Washington
  • Washington Permanente Medical Group

Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute

Phone: 206-287-2900
Fax: 206-287-2871
Contact us
Sign up for our newsletter
Policy on Conflict of Interest
Nondiscrimination Notice and Language Access Services
Kaiser Permanente Research

©2025 KPWHRI

Site Map Terms of Use and Privacy Policy

  
Sign In

facebook.png

twitter.png

kp_linkedin.png

Land Acknowledgment
Our Seattle offices sit on the occupied land of the Duwamish and by the shared waters of the Coast Salish people, who have been here thousands of years and remain. Learn about practicing land acknowledgment.