Jove
Visualize
Contact Us
JoVE
x logofacebook logolinkedin logoyoutube logo
ABOUT JoVE
OverviewLeadershipBlogJoVE Help Center
AUTHORS
Publishing ProcessEditorial BoardScope & PoliciesPeer ReviewFAQSubmit
LIBRARIANS
TestimonialsSubscriptionsAccessResourcesLibrary Advisory BoardFAQ
RESEARCH
JoVE JournalMethods CollectionsJoVE Encyclopedia of ExperimentsArchive
EDUCATION
JoVE CoreJoVE BusinessJoVE Science EducationJoVE Lab ManualFaculty Resource CenterFaculty Site
Terms & Conditions of Use
Privacy Policy
Policies

Filters

Elizabeth Colantuoni

Showing results (1-10 of 202) with videos related to

Pageof 21
Sort By:
Critical Care Medicine|March 18, 2021
Clarifying the Impact of Predicted Versus Observed Control Arm Mortality Rates on Randomized Trials in Critical IllnessElizabeth Colantuoni
Statistics in Medicine|November 8, 2017
CorrectionElizabeth Colantuoni, Michael Rosenblum
Statistics in Medicine|April 16, 2015
Leveraging prognostic baseline variables to gain precision in randomized trialsElizabeth Colantuoni, Michael Rosenblum
JAMA|March 26, 2009
Measuring preventable harm: helping science keep pace with policyPeter J Pronovost, Elizabeth Colantuoni
Biometrics|November 18, 2015
Enhanced precision in the analysis of randomized trials with ordinal outcomesIván Díaz, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Michael Rosenblum
Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications|April 27, 2018
Sensitivity of adaptive enrichment trial designs to accrual rates, time to outcome measurement, and prognostic variablesTianchen Qian, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Aaron Fisher, et al.
Population Studies|February 6, 2019
Sexual activity and weekly contraceptive use among young adult women in MichiganSusannah E Gibbs, Yasamin Kusunoki, Elizabeth Colantuoni, et al.
Journal of Statistical Software|December 4, 2020
idem: An R Package for Inferences in Clinical Trials with Death and MissingnessChenguang Wang, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Andrew Leroux, et al.
Lifetime Data Analysis|September 6, 2019
Correction to: Improved precision in the analysis of randomized trials with survival outcomes, without assuming proportional hazardsIván Díaz, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Daniel F Hanley, et al.
Lifetime Data Analysis|March 2, 2018
Improved precision in the analysis of randomized trials with survival outcomes, without assuming proportional hazardsIván Díaz, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Daniel F Hanley, et al.
Pageof 21

Showing results (1-10 of 202) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 21
Critical Care Medicine|March 18, 2021
Clarifying the Impact of Predicted Versus Observed Control Arm Mortality Rates on Randomized Trials in Critical IllnessElizabeth Colantuoni
Statistics in Medicine|November 8, 2017
CorrectionElizabeth Colantuoni, Michael Rosenblum
Statistics in Medicine|April 16, 2015
Leveraging prognostic baseline variables to gain precision in randomized trialsElizabeth Colantuoni, Michael Rosenblum
JAMA|March 26, 2009
Measuring preventable harm: helping science keep pace with policyPeter J Pronovost, Elizabeth Colantuoni
Biometrics|November 18, 2015
Enhanced precision in the analysis of randomized trials with ordinal outcomesIván Díaz, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Michael Rosenblum
Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications|April 27, 2018
Sensitivity of adaptive enrichment trial designs to accrual rates, time to outcome measurement, and prognostic variablesTianchen Qian, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Aaron Fisher, et al.
Population Studies|February 6, 2019
Sexual activity and weekly contraceptive use among young adult women in MichiganSusannah E Gibbs, Yasamin Kusunoki, Elizabeth Colantuoni, et al.
Journal of Statistical Software|December 4, 2020
idem: An R Package for Inferences in Clinical Trials with Death and MissingnessChenguang Wang, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Andrew Leroux, et al.
Lifetime Data Analysis|September 6, 2019
Correction to: Improved precision in the analysis of randomized trials with survival outcomes, without assuming proportional hazardsIván Díaz, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Daniel F Hanley, et al.
Lifetime Data Analysis|March 2, 2018
Improved precision in the analysis of randomized trials with survival outcomes, without assuming proportional hazardsIván Díaz, Elizabeth Colantuoni, Daniel F Hanley, et al.
Pageof 21