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Related Concept Videos

Bias01:22

Bias

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Bias refers to any tendency that prevents a question from being considered unprejudiced. In research, bias occurs when one outcome or answer is selected or encouraged over others in sampling or testing. Bias can occur during any research phase, including study design, data collection, analysis, and publication.
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While taking the arithmetic, geometric, or harmonic mean of a sample data set, equal importance is assigned to all the data points. However, all the values may not always be equally important in some data sets. An intrinsic bias might make it more important to give more weightage to specific values over others.
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Sampling is a technique to select a portion (or subset) of the larger population and study that portion (the sample) to gain information about the population. The sampling method ensures that samples are drawn without bias and accurately represent the population. Because measuring the entire population in a study is not practical, researchers use samples to represent the population of interest.
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Bias in Epidemiological Studies01:29

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Biases can arise at various stages of research, from study design and data collection to analysis and interpretation. Recognizing and addressing these biases is essential to ensure the validity and reliability of epidemiological findings.Broadly speaking, biases in epidemiology fall into three main categories: selection bias, information bias, and confounding. A more detailed description of possible biases is:  
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Fisher's Exact Test01:08

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Fisher's exact test is a statistical significance test widely used to analyze 2x2 contingency tables, particularly in situations where sample sizes are small. Unlike the chi-squared test, which approximates P-values and assumes minimum expected frequencies of at least five in each cell, Fisher's exact test calculates the exact probability (P-value) of observing the data or more extreme results under the null hypothesis. This feature makes it especially valuable when the assumptions of...
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The representative heuristic describes a biased way of thinking, in which you unintentionally stereotype someone or something. For example, you may assume that your professors spend their free time reading books and engaging in intellectual conversation, because the idea of them spending their time playing volleyball or visiting an amusement park does not fit in with your stereotypes of professors.
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The Debiased Spatial Whittle likelihood.

Arthur P Guillaumin1, Adam M Sykulski2, Sofia C Olhede3,4

  • 1Queen Mary University of London London UK.

Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series B, Statistical Methodology
|January 9, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

We developed an efficient method to estimate spatial covariance model parameters, correcting biases from boundary effects and missing data. This computationally scalable approach enhances the accuracy of spatial data analysis for large datasets.

Keywords:
Whittle likelihoodaliasingirregular boundariesmissing datarandom fields

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Area of Science:

  • Spatial Statistics
  • Geostatistics
  • Computational Statistics

Background:

  • Estimating parameters of spatial covariance models is crucial for analyzing spatially indexed data.
  • Traditional methods like the Whittle likelihood suffer from bias due to boundary effects and aliasing, especially with large datasets.
  • Handling missing data and irregular sampling boundaries presents significant challenges in spatial modeling.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To introduce a computationally and statistically efficient method for parameter estimation in stochastic covariance models on spatial grids.
  • To correct for bias in existing Whittle likelihood methods, specifically addressing boundary effects and aliasing.
  • To extend the methodology for handling missing data, irregular sampling, and multivariate spatial processes.

Main Methods:

  • Development of the Debiased Spatial Whittle likelihood, a novel approach correcting for bias.
  • Generalization to accommodate significant missing data, including lower-dimensional substructures and irregular sampling boundaries.
  • Establishment of a theoretical framework ensuring consistency and asymptotic normality under weak assumptions, including non-Gaussian processes.

Main Results:

  • The proposed method provides consistent and asymptotically normal parameter estimates in various practical settings, including those with missing data and non-Gaussian processes.
  • The estimation procedure is computationally scalable, requiring O(n) operations, where n is the number of grid points, maintaining efficiency for large datasets.
  • Validation across simulated and real-world data demonstrates superior performance compared to existing methods.

Conclusions:

  • The Debiased Spatial Whittle likelihood offers an efficient and accurate solution for parameter estimation in high-dimensional spatial covariance models.
  • The method effectively addresses limitations of traditional approaches, particularly concerning boundary effects and data gaps.
  • This work reaffirms the practical utility of Fourier-based methods in spatial statistics when enhanced with bias correction techniques.