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Estimation following selection of the largest of two normal means. Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference 138, 1629-1638.

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Estimation following selection of the largest of two normal means. Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference 138, 1629-1638. / Stallard, Nigel; Todd, Susan; Whitehead, John.
In: Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference, Vol. 138, No. 6, 01.07.2008, p. 1629-1638.

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Stallard N, Todd S, Whitehead J. Estimation following selection of the largest of two normal means. Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference 138, 1629-1638. Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference. 2008 Jul 1;138(6):1629-1638. doi: 10.1016/j.jspi.2007.05.045

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Stallard, Nigel ; Todd, Susan ; Whitehead, John. / Estimation following selection of the largest of two normal means. Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference 138, 1629-1638. In: Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference. 2008 ; Vol. 138, No. 6. pp. 1629-1638.

Bibtex

@article{347171d49366490c8e88ab553f411df1,
title = "Estimation following selection of the largest of two normal means. Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference 138, 1629-1638.",
abstract = "This paper considers the problem of estimation when one of a number of populations, assumed normal with known common variance, is selected on the basis of it having the largest observed mean. Conditional on selection of the population, the observed mean is a biased estimate of the true mean. This problem arises in the analysis of clinical trials in which selection is made between a number of experimental treatments that are compared with each other either with or without an additional control treatment. Attempts to obtain approximately unbiased estimates in this setting have been proposed by Shen [2001. An improved method of evaluating drug effect in a multiple dose clinical trial. Statist. Medicine 20, 1913–1929] and Stallard and Todd [2005. Point estimates and confidence regions for sequential trials involving selection. J. Statist. Plann. Inference 135, 402–419]. This paper explores the problem in the simple setting in which two experimental treatments are compared in a single analysis. It is shown that in this case the estimate of Stallard and Todd is the maximum-likelihood estimate (m.l.e.), and this is compared with the estimate proposed by Shen. In particular, it is shown that the m.l.e. has infinite expectation whatever the true value of the mean being estimated. We show that there is no conditionally unbiased estimator, and propose a new family of approximately conditionally unbiased estimators, comparing these with the estimators suggested by Shen.",
keywords = "Clinical trial analysis, Select and test designs, Treatment selection",
author = "Nigel Stallard and Susan Todd and John Whitehead",
year = "2008",
month = jul,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.jspi.2007.05.045",
language = "English",
volume = "138",
pages = "1629--1638",
journal = "Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference",
issn = "0378-3758",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Estimation following selection of the largest of two normal means. Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference 138, 1629-1638.

AU - Stallard, Nigel

AU - Todd, Susan

AU - Whitehead, John

PY - 2008/7/1

Y1 - 2008/7/1

N2 - This paper considers the problem of estimation when one of a number of populations, assumed normal with known common variance, is selected on the basis of it having the largest observed mean. Conditional on selection of the population, the observed mean is a biased estimate of the true mean. This problem arises in the analysis of clinical trials in which selection is made between a number of experimental treatments that are compared with each other either with or without an additional control treatment. Attempts to obtain approximately unbiased estimates in this setting have been proposed by Shen [2001. An improved method of evaluating drug effect in a multiple dose clinical trial. Statist. Medicine 20, 1913–1929] and Stallard and Todd [2005. Point estimates and confidence regions for sequential trials involving selection. J. Statist. Plann. Inference 135, 402–419]. This paper explores the problem in the simple setting in which two experimental treatments are compared in a single analysis. It is shown that in this case the estimate of Stallard and Todd is the maximum-likelihood estimate (m.l.e.), and this is compared with the estimate proposed by Shen. In particular, it is shown that the m.l.e. has infinite expectation whatever the true value of the mean being estimated. We show that there is no conditionally unbiased estimator, and propose a new family of approximately conditionally unbiased estimators, comparing these with the estimators suggested by Shen.

AB - This paper considers the problem of estimation when one of a number of populations, assumed normal with known common variance, is selected on the basis of it having the largest observed mean. Conditional on selection of the population, the observed mean is a biased estimate of the true mean. This problem arises in the analysis of clinical trials in which selection is made between a number of experimental treatments that are compared with each other either with or without an additional control treatment. Attempts to obtain approximately unbiased estimates in this setting have been proposed by Shen [2001. An improved method of evaluating drug effect in a multiple dose clinical trial. Statist. Medicine 20, 1913–1929] and Stallard and Todd [2005. Point estimates and confidence regions for sequential trials involving selection. J. Statist. Plann. Inference 135, 402–419]. This paper explores the problem in the simple setting in which two experimental treatments are compared in a single analysis. It is shown that in this case the estimate of Stallard and Todd is the maximum-likelihood estimate (m.l.e.), and this is compared with the estimate proposed by Shen. In particular, it is shown that the m.l.e. has infinite expectation whatever the true value of the mean being estimated. We show that there is no conditionally unbiased estimator, and propose a new family of approximately conditionally unbiased estimators, comparing these with the estimators suggested by Shen.

KW - Clinical trial analysis

KW - Select and test designs

KW - Treatment selection

U2 - 10.1016/j.jspi.2007.05.045

DO - 10.1016/j.jspi.2007.05.045

M3 - Journal article

VL - 138

SP - 1629

EP - 1638

JO - Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference

JF - Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference

SN - 0378-3758

IS - 6

ER -