anc Advances in protein chemistry and structural biology. By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Callnumber: OnlineISBN: 9780123864840 (electronic bk.) Full Article
anc Advances in parasitology. By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Callnumber: OnlineISBN: 9780123742292 (electronic bk.) Full Article
anc Advances in cyanobacterial biology By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Callnumber: OnlineISBN: 9780128193129 (electronic bk.) Full Article
anc Advances in applied microbiology. By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Callnumber: OnlineISBN: 1282169459 Full Article
anc Advances in applied microbiology. By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Callnumber: OnlineISBN: 1282169416 Full Article
anc Advanced age geriatric care : a comprehensive guide By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Callnumber: OnlineISBN: 9783319969985 (electronic bk.) Full Article
anc Suntuity AirWorks Offering FREE Assistance in Drone Acquisition... By www.prweb.com Published On :: The drones and programs will be fully paid for by the DOJ as part of the $850 million funding that has been allocated to help public safety departments fight the spread of COVID-19. This includes...(PRWeb April 30, 2020)Read the full story at https://www.prweb.com/releases/suntuity_airworks_offering_free_assistance_in_drone_acquisition_through_850mm_federal_grant_assistance_program_for_public_safety_agencies/prweb17090555.htm Full Article
anc Health Worker Data Alliance: Monitoring Emotional, Physical and... By www.prweb.com Published On :: Surveys provide secure, anonymous feedback from staff at all levels of healthcare organizations(PRWeb May 06, 2020)Read the full story at https://www.prweb.com/releases/health_worker_data_alliance_monitoring_emotional_physical_and_occupational_health_of_healthcare_workers_during_covid_19/prweb17101008.htm Full Article
anc Robust sparse covariance estimation by thresholding Tyler’s M-estimator By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 17 Feb 2020 04:02 EST John Goes, Gilad Lerman, Boaz Nadler. Source: The Annals of Statistics, Volume 48, Number 1, 86--110.Abstract: Estimating a high-dimensional sparse covariance matrix from a limited number of samples is a fundamental task in contemporary data analysis. Most proposals to date, however, are not robust to outliers or heavy tails. Toward bridging this gap, in this work we consider estimating a sparse shape matrix from $n$ samples following a possibly heavy-tailed elliptical distribution. We propose estimators based on thresholding either Tyler’s M-estimator or its regularized variant. We prove that in the joint limit as the dimension $p$ and the sample size $n$ tend to infinity with $p/n ogamma>0$, our estimators are minimax rate optimal. Results on simulated data support our theoretical analysis. Full Article
anc Joint convergence of sample autocovariance matrices when $p/n o 0$ with application By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2019 22:03 EDT Monika Bhattacharjee, Arup Bose. Source: The Annals of Statistics, Volume 47, Number 6, 3470--3503.Abstract: Consider a high-dimensional linear time series model where the dimension $p$ and the sample size $n$ grow in such a way that $p/n o 0$. Let $hat{Gamma }_{u}$ be the $u$th order sample autocovariance matrix. We first show that the LSD of any symmetric polynomial in ${hat{Gamma }_{u},hat{Gamma }_{u}^{*},ugeq 0}$ exists under independence and moment assumptions on the driving sequence together with weak assumptions on the coefficient matrices. This LSD result, with some additional effort, implies the asymptotic normality of the trace of any polynomial in ${hat{Gamma }_{u},hat{Gamma }_{u}^{*},ugeq 0}$. We also study similar results for several independent MA processes. We show applications of the above results to statistical inference problems such as in estimation of the unknown order of a high-dimensional MA process and in graphical and significance tests for hypotheses on coefficient matrices of one or several such independent processes. Full Article
anc Hypothesis testing on linear structures of high-dimensional covariance matrix By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2019 22:03 EDT Shurong Zheng, Zhao Chen, Hengjian Cui, Runze Li. Source: The Annals of Statistics, Volume 47, Number 6, 3300--3334.Abstract: This paper is concerned with test of significance on high-dimensional covariance structures, and aims to develop a unified framework for testing commonly used linear covariance structures. We first construct a consistent estimator for parameters involved in the linear covariance structure, and then develop two tests for the linear covariance structures based on entropy loss and quadratic loss used for covariance matrix estimation. To study the asymptotic properties of the proposed tests, we study related high-dimensional random matrix theory, and establish several highly useful asymptotic results. With the aid of these asymptotic results, we derive the limiting distributions of these two tests under the null and alternative hypotheses. We further show that the quadratic loss based test is asymptotically unbiased. We conduct Monte Carlo simulation study to examine the finite sample performance of the two tests. Our simulation results show that the limiting null distributions approximate their null distributions quite well, and the corresponding asymptotic critical values keep Type I error rate very well. Our numerical comparison implies that the proposed tests outperform existing ones in terms of controlling Type I error rate and power. Our simulation indicates that the test based on quadratic loss seems to have better power than the test based on entropy loss. Full Article
anc Eigenvalue distributions of variance components estimators in high-dimensional random effects models By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Fri, 02 Aug 2019 22:04 EDT Zhou Fan, Iain M. Johnstone. Source: The Annals of Statistics, Volume 47, Number 5, 2855--2886.Abstract: We study the spectra of MANOVA estimators for variance component covariance matrices in multivariate random effects models. When the dimensionality of the observations is large and comparable to the number of realizations of each random effect, we show that the empirical spectra of such estimators are well approximated by deterministic laws. The Stieltjes transforms of these laws are characterized by systems of fixed-point equations, which are numerically solvable by a simple iterative procedure. Our proof uses operator-valued free probability theory, and we establish a general asymptotic freeness result for families of rectangular orthogonally invariant random matrices, which is of independent interest. Our work is motivated in part by the estimation of components of covariance between multiple phenotypic traits in quantitative genetics, and we specialize our results to common experimental designs that arise in this application. Full Article
anc Distance multivariance: New dependence measures for random vectors By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Fri, 02 Aug 2019 22:04 EDT Björn Böttcher, Martin Keller-Ressel, René L. Schilling. Source: The Annals of Statistics, Volume 47, Number 5, 2757--2789.Abstract: We introduce two new measures for the dependence of $nge2$ random variables: distance multivariance and total distance multivariance . Both measures are based on the weighted $L^{2}$-distance of quantities related to the characteristic functions of the underlying random variables. These extend distance covariance (introduced by Székely, Rizzo and Bakirov) from pairs of random variables to $n$-tuplets of random variables. We show that total distance multivariance can be used to detect the independence of $n$ random variables and has a simple finite-sample representation in terms of distance matrices of the sample points, where distance is measured by a continuous negative definite function. Under some mild moment conditions, this leads to a test for independence of multiple random vectors which is consistent against all alternatives. Full Article
anc Liberty Alliance By looselycoupled.com Published On :: 2003-12-07T15:00:00-00:00 Digital identity standards group. Set up at the instigation of Sun Microsystems in 2001, the Liberty Alliance Project is a consortium of technology vendors and consumer-facing enterprises formed "to establish an open standard for federated network identity." It aims to make it easier for consumers to access networked services from multiple suppliers while safeguarding security and privacy. Its specifications have been published in three phases: the Identity Federation Framework (ID-FF) came first; the Identity Web Services Framework (ID-WSF) followed in November 2003; and work is in progress on the Identity Services Interface Specifications (ID-SIS). Liberty Alliance specifications are closely linked to the SAML single sign-on standard, and overlap with elements of WS-Security. Full Article
anc governance By looselycoupled.com Published On :: 2005-06-06T17:00:00-00:00 How an organization controls its actions. Governance describes the mechanisms an organization uses to ensure that its constituents follow its established processes and policies. It is the primary means of maintaining oversight and accountability in a loosely coupled organizational structure. A proper governance strategy implements systems to monitor and record what is going on, takes steps to ensure compliance with agreed policies, and provides for corrective action in cases where the rules have been ignored or misconstrued. Full Article
anc Regression for copula-linked compound distributions with applications in modeling aggregate insurance claims By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Wed, 15 Apr 2020 22:05 EDT Peng Shi, Zifeng Zhao. Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 357--380.Abstract: In actuarial research a task of particular interest and importance is to predict the loss cost for individual risks so that informative decisions are made in various insurance operations such as underwriting, ratemaking and capital management. The loss cost is typically viewed to follow a compound distribution where the summation of the severity variables is stopped by the frequency variable. A challenging issue in modeling such outcomes is to accommodate the potential dependence between the number of claims and the size of each individual claim. In this article we introduce a novel regression framework for compound distributions that uses a copula to accommodate the association between the frequency and the severity variables and, thus, allows for arbitrary dependence between the two components. We further show that the new model is very flexible and is easily modified to account for incomplete data due to censoring or truncation. The flexibility of the proposed model is illustrated using both simulated and real data sets. In the analysis of granular claims data from property insurance, we find substantive negative relationship between the number and the size of insurance claims. In addition, we demonstrate that ignoring the frequency-severity association could lead to biased decision-making in insurance operations. Full Article
anc Surface temperature monitoring in liver procurement via functional variance change-point analysis By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Wed, 15 Apr 2020 22:05 EDT Zhenguo Gao, Pang Du, Ran Jin, John L. Robertson. Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 143--159.Abstract: Liver procurement experiments with surface-temperature monitoring motivated Gao et al. ( J. Amer. Statist. Assoc. 114 (2019) 773–781) to develop a variance change-point detection method under a smoothly-changing mean trend. However, the spotwise change points yielded from their method do not offer immediate information to surgeons since an organ is often transplanted as a whole or in part. We develop a new practical method that can analyze a defined portion of the organ surface at a time. It also provides a novel addition to the developing field of functional data monitoring. Furthermore, numerical challenge emerges for simultaneously modeling the variance functions of 2D locations and the mean function of location and time. The respective sample sizes in the scales of 10,000 and 1,000,000 for modeling these functions make standard spline estimation too costly to be useful. We introduce a multistage subsampling strategy with steps educated by quickly-computable preliminary statistical measures. Extensive simulations show that the new method can efficiently reduce the computational cost and provide reasonable parameter estimates. Application of the new method to our liver surface temperature monitoring data shows its effectiveness in providing accurate status change information for a selected portion of the organ in the experiment. Full Article
anc Modeling microbial abundances and dysbiosis with beta-binomial regression By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Wed, 15 Apr 2020 22:05 EDT Bryan D. Martin, Daniela Witten, Amy D. Willis. Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 94--115.Abstract: Using a sample from a population to estimate the proportion of the population with a certain category label is a broadly important problem. In the context of microbiome studies, this problem arises when researchers wish to use a sample from a population of microbes to estimate the population proportion of a particular taxon, known as the taxon’s relative abundance . In this paper, we propose a beta-binomial model for this task. Like existing models, our model allows for a taxon’s relative abundance to be associated with covariates of interest. However, unlike existing models, our proposal also allows for the overdispersion in the taxon’s counts to be associated with covariates of interest. We exploit this model in order to propose tests not only for differential relative abundance, but also for differential variability. The latter is particularly valuable in light of speculation that dysbiosis , the perturbation from a normal microbiome that can occur in certain disease conditions, may manifest as a loss of stability, or increase in variability, of the counts associated with each taxon. We demonstrate the performance of our proposed model using a simulation study and an application to soil microbial data. Full Article
anc Statistical inference for partially observed branching processes with application to cell lineage tracking of in vivo hematopoiesis By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Wed, 27 Nov 2019 22:01 EST Jason Xu, Samson Koelle, Peter Guttorp, Chuanfeng Wu, Cynthia Dunbar, Janis L. Abkowitz, Vladimir N. Minin. Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 13, Number 4, 2091--2119.Abstract: Single-cell lineage tracking strategies enabled by recent experimental technologies have produced significant insights into cell fate decisions, but lack the quantitative framework necessary for rigorous statistical analysis of mechanistic models describing cell division and differentiation. In this paper, we develop such a framework with corresponding moment-based parameter estimation techniques for continuous-time, multi-type branching processes. Such processes provide a probabilistic model of how cells divide and differentiate, and we apply our method to study hematopoiesis , the mechanism of blood cell production. We derive closed-form expressions for higher moments in a general class of such models. These analytical results allow us to efficiently estimate parameters of much richer statistical models of hematopoiesis than those used in previous statistical studies. To our knowledge, the method provides the first rate inference procedure for fitting such models to time series data generated from cellular barcoding experiments. After validating the methodology in simulation studies, we apply our estimator to hematopoietic lineage tracking data from rhesus macaques. Our analysis provides a more complete understanding of cell fate decisions during hematopoiesis in nonhuman primates, which may be more relevant to human biology and clinical strategies than previous findings from murine studies. For example, in addition to previously estimated hematopoietic stem cell self-renewal rate, we are able to estimate fate decision probabilities and to compare structurally distinct models of hematopoiesis using cross validation. These estimates of fate decision probabilities and our model selection results should help biologists compare competing hypotheses about how progenitor cells differentiate. The methodology is transferrable to a large class of stochastic compartmental and multi-type branching models, commonly used in studies of cancer progression, epidemiology and many other fields. Full Article
anc Estimating abundance from multiple sampling capture-recapture data via a multi-state multi-period stopover model By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Wed, 27 Nov 2019 22:01 EST Hannah Worthington, Rachel McCrea, Ruth King, Richard Griffiths. Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 13, Number 4, 2043--2064.Abstract: Capture-recapture studies often involve collecting data on numerous capture occasions over a relatively short period of time. For many study species this process is repeated, for example, annually, resulting in capture information spanning multiple sampling periods. To account for the different temporal scales, the robust design class of models have traditionally been applied providing a framework in which to analyse all of the available capture data in a single likelihood expression. However, these models typically require strong constraints, either the assumption of closure within a sampling period (the closed robust design) or conditioning on the number of individuals captured within a sampling period (the open robust design). For real datasets these assumptions may not be appropriate. We develop a general modelling structure that requires neither assumption by explicitly modelling the movement of individuals into the population both within and between the sampling periods, which in turn permits the estimation of abundance within a single consistent framework. The flexibility of the novel model structure is further demonstrated by including the computationally challenging case of multi-state data where there is individual time-varying discrete covariate information. We derive an efficient likelihood expression for the new multi-state multi-period stopover model using the hidden Markov model framework. We demonstrate the significant improvement in parameter estimation using our new modelling approach in terms of both the multi-period and multi-state components through both a simulation study and a real dataset relating to the protected species of great crested newts, Triturus cristatus . Full Article
anc The classification permutation test: A flexible approach to testing for covariate imbalance in observational studies By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Wed, 16 Oct 2019 22:03 EDT Johann Gagnon-Bartsch, Yotam Shem-Tov. Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 13, Number 3, 1464--1483.Abstract: The gold standard for identifying causal relationships is a randomized controlled experiment. In many applications in the social sciences and medicine, the researcher does not control the assignment mechanism and instead may rely upon natural experiments or matching methods as a substitute to experimental randomization. The standard testable implication of random assignment is covariate balance between the treated and control units. Covariate balance is commonly used to validate the claim of as good as random assignment. We propose a new nonparametric test of covariate balance. Our Classification Permutation Test (CPT) is based on a combination of classification methods (e.g., random forests) with Fisherian permutation inference. We revisit four real data examples and present Monte Carlo power simulations to demonstrate the applicability of the CPT relative to other nonparametric tests of equality of multivariate distributions. Full Article
anc Imputation and post-selection inference in models with missing data: An application to colorectal cancer surveillance guidelines By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Wed, 16 Oct 2019 22:03 EDT Lin Liu, Yuqi Qiu, Loki Natarajan, Karen Messer. Source: The Annals of Applied Statistics, Volume 13, Number 3, 1370--1396.Abstract: It is common to encounter missing data among the potential predictor variables in the setting of model selection. For example, in a recent study we attempted to improve the US guidelines for risk stratification after screening colonoscopy ( Cancer Causes Control 27 (2016) 1175–1185), with the aim to help reduce both overuse and underuse of follow-on surveillance colonoscopy. The goal was to incorporate selected additional informative variables into a neoplasia risk-prediction model, going beyond the three currently established risk factors, using a large dataset pooled from seven different prospective studies in North America. Unfortunately, not all candidate variables were collected in all studies, so that one or more important potential predictors were missing on over half of the subjects. Thus, while variable selection was a main focus of the study, it was necessary to address the substantial amount of missing data. Multiple imputation can effectively address missing data, and there are also good approaches to incorporate the variable selection process into model-based confidence intervals. However, there is not consensus on appropriate methods of inference which address both issues simultaneously. Our goal here is to study the properties of model-based confidence intervals in the setting of imputation for missing data followed by variable selection. We use both simulation and theory to compare three approaches to such post-imputation-selection inference: a multiple-imputation approach based on Rubin’s Rules for variance estimation ( Comput. Statist. Data Anal. 71 (2014) 758–770); a single imputation-selection followed by bootstrap percentile confidence intervals; and a new bootstrap model-averaging approach presented here, following Efron ( J. Amer. Statist. Assoc. 109 (2014) 991–1007). We investigate relative strengths and weaknesses of each method. The “Rubin’s Rules” multiple imputation estimator can have severe undercoverage, and is not recommended. The imputation-selection estimator with bootstrap percentile confidence intervals works well. The bootstrap-model-averaged estimator, with the “Efron’s Rules” estimated variance, may be preferred if the true effect sizes are moderate. We apply these results to the colorectal neoplasia risk-prediction problem which motivated the present work. Full Article
anc Frequency domain theory for functional time series: Variance decomposition and an invariance principle By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 04:02 EDT Piotr Kokoszka, Neda Mohammadi Jouzdani. Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 3, 2383--2399.Abstract: This paper is concerned with frequency domain theory for functional time series, which are temporally dependent sequences of functions in a Hilbert space. We consider a variance decomposition, which is more suitable for such a data structure than the variance decomposition based on the Karhunen–Loéve expansion. The decomposition we study uses eigenvalues of spectral density operators, which are functional analogs of the spectral density of a stationary scalar time series. We propose estimators of the variance components and derive convergence rates for their mean square error as well as their asymptotic normality. The latter is derived from a frequency domain invariance principle for the estimators of the spectral density operators. This principle is established for a broad class of linear time series models. It is a main contribution of the paper. Full Article
anc First-order covariance inequalities via Stein’s method By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 04:02 EDT Marie Ernst, Gesine Reinert, Yvik Swan. Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 3, 2051--2081.Abstract: We propose probabilistic representations for inverse Stein operators (i.e., solutions to Stein equations) under general conditions; in particular, we deduce new simple expressions for the Stein kernel. These representations allow to deduce uniform and nonuniform Stein factors (i.e., bounds on solutions to Stein equations) and lead to new covariance identities expressing the covariance between arbitrary functionals of an arbitrary univariate target in terms of a weighted covariance of the derivatives of the functionals. Our weights are explicit, easily computable in most cases and expressed in terms of objects familiar within the context of Stein’s method. Applications of the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality to these weighted covariance identities lead to sharp upper and lower covariance bounds and, in particular, weighted Poincaré inequalities. Many examples are given and, in particular, classical variance bounds due to Klaassen, Brascamp and Lieb or Otto and Menz are corollaries. Connections with more recent literature are also detailed. Full Article
anc On stability of traveling wave solutions for integro-differential equations related to branching Markov processes By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Fri, 31 Jan 2020 04:06 EST Pasha Tkachov. Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 2, 1354--1380.Abstract: The aim of this paper is to prove stability of traveling waves for integro-differential equations connected with branching Markov processes. In other words, the limiting law of the left-most particle of a (time-continuous) branching Markov process with a Lévy non-branching part is demonstrated. The key idea is to approximate the branching Markov process by a branching random walk and apply the result of Aïdékon [ Ann. Probab. 41 (2013) 1362–1426] on the limiting law of the latter one. Full Article
anc Characterization of probability distribution convergence in Wasserstein distance by $L^{p}$-quantization error function By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Fri, 31 Jan 2020 04:06 EST Yating Liu, Gilles Pagès. Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 2, 1171--1204.Abstract: We establish conditions to characterize probability measures by their $L^{p}$-quantization error functions in both $mathbb{R}^{d}$ and Hilbert settings. This characterization is two-fold: static (identity of two distributions) and dynamic (convergence for the $L^{p}$-Wasserstein distance). We first propose a criterion on the quantization level $N$, valid for any norm on $mathbb{R}^{d}$ and any order $p$ based on a geometrical approach involving the Voronoï diagram. Then, we prove that in the $L^{2}$-case on a (separable) Hilbert space, the condition on the level $N$ can be reduced to $N=2$, which is optimal. More quantization based characterization cases in dimension 1 and a discussion of the completeness of a distance defined by the quantization error function can be found at the end of this paper. Full Article
anc Distances and large deviations in the spatial preferential attachment model By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Fri, 31 Jan 2020 04:06 EST Christian Hirsch, Christian Mönch. Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 2, 927--947.Abstract: This paper considers two asymptotic properties of a spatial preferential-attachment model introduced by E. Jacob and P. Mörters (In Algorithms and Models for the Web Graph (2013) 14–25 Springer). First, in a regime of strong linear reinforcement, we show that typical distances are at most of doubly-logarithmic order. Second, we derive a large deviation principle for the empirical neighbourhood structure and express the rate function as solution to an entropy minimisation problem in the space of stationary marked point processes. Full Article
anc Convergence and concentration of empirical measures under Wasserstein distance in unbounded functional spaces By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Tue, 26 Nov 2019 04:00 EST Jing Lei. Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 1, 767--798.Abstract: We provide upper bounds of the expected Wasserstein distance between a probability measure and its empirical version, generalizing recent results for finite dimensional Euclidean spaces and bounded functional spaces. Such a generalization can cover Euclidean spaces with large dimensionality, with the optimal dependence on the dimensionality. Our method also covers the important case of Gaussian processes in separable Hilbert spaces, with rate-optimal upper bounds for functional data distributions whose coordinates decay geometrically or polynomially. Moreover, our bounds of the expected value can be combined with mean-concentration results to yield improved exponential tail probability bounds for the Wasserstein error of empirical measures under Bernstein-type or log Sobolev-type conditions. Full Article
anc Robust modifications of U-statistics and applications to covariance estimation problems By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Tue, 26 Nov 2019 04:00 EST Stanislav Minsker, Xiaohan Wei. Source: Bernoulli, Volume 26, Number 1, 694--727.Abstract: Let $Y$ be a $d$-dimensional random vector with unknown mean $mu $ and covariance matrix $Sigma $. This paper is motivated by the problem of designing an estimator of $Sigma $ that admits exponential deviation bounds in the operator norm under minimal assumptions on the underlying distribution, such as existence of only 4th moments of the coordinates of $Y$. To address this problem, we propose robust modifications of the operator-valued U-statistics, obtain non-asymptotic guarantees for their performance, and demonstrate the implications of these results to the covariance estimation problem under various structural assumptions. Full Article
anc Fuhlbohm family history : a collection of memorabilia of our ancestors and families in Germany, USA, and Australia / by Oscar Fuhlbohm. By www.catalog.slsa.sa.gov.au Published On :: Fuhlbohm (Family) Full Article
anc No turning back : stories of our ancestors / by David Gambling. By www.catalog.slsa.sa.gov.au Published On :: Gambling (Family) Full Article
anc Daws : the ancestors of Revell Daws. By www.catalog.slsa.sa.gov.au Published On :: Daws, Revell. Full Article
anc Fuhlbohm family history : a collection of memorabilia of our ancestors and families in Germany, USA, and Australia / by Oscar Fuhlbohm. By www.catalog.slsa.sa.gov.au Published On :: Fuhlbohm (Family) Full Article
anc From alms house to first nation : a story of my ancestors in South Australia : a Sherwell family story / by Pamela Coad (nee Sherwell). By www.catalog.slsa.sa.gov.au Published On :: Sherwell (Family) Full Article
anc How States, Assessment Companies Can Work Together Amid Coronavirus Testing Cancellations By marketbrief.edweek.org Published On :: Fri, 01 May 2020 15:17:53 +0000 Scott Marion, who consults states on testing, talks about why it's important for vendors and public officials to work cooperatively in renegotiating contracts amid assessment cancellations caused by COVID-19. The post How States, Assessment Companies Can Work Together Amid Coronavirus Testing Cancellations appeared first on Market Brief. Full Article Marketplace K-12 Assessments / Testing Business Strategy COVID-19 Procurement / Purchasing / RFPs
anc Chaffetz: I don't understand why Adam Schiff continues to have a security clearance By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 14:43:30 -0400 Fox News contributor Jason Chaffetz and Andy McCarthy react to House Intelligence transcripts on Russia probe. Full Article
anc 'We Cannot Police Our Way Out of a Pandemic.' Experts, Police Union Say NYPD Should Not Be Enforcing Social Distance Rules Amid COVID-19 By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 17:03:38 -0400 The New York City police department (NYPD) is conducting an internal investigation into a May 2 incident involving the violent arrests of multiple people, allegedly members of a group who were not social distancing Full Article
anc Estimating the Use of Public Lands: Integrated Modeling of Open Populations with Convolution Likelihood Ecological Abundance Regression By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Thu, 19 Dec 2019 22:10 EST Lutz F. Gruber, Erica F. Stuber, Lyndsie S. Wszola, Joseph J. Fontaine. Source: Bayesian Analysis, Volume 14, Number 4, 1173--1199.Abstract: We present an integrated open population model where the population dynamics are defined by a differential equation, and the related statistical model utilizes a Poisson binomial convolution likelihood. Key advantages of the proposed approach over existing open population models include the flexibility to predict related, but unobserved quantities such as total immigration or emigration over a specified time period, and more computationally efficient posterior simulation by elimination of the need to explicitly simulate latent immigration and emigration. The viability of the proposed method is shown in an in-depth analysis of outdoor recreation participation on public lands, where the surveyed populations changed rapidly and demographic population closure cannot be assumed even within a single day. Full Article
anc Variance Prior Forms for High-Dimensional Bayesian Variable Selection By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Thu, 19 Dec 2019 22:10 EST Gemma E. Moran, Veronika Ročková, Edward I. George. Source: Bayesian Analysis, Volume 14, Number 4, 1091--1119.Abstract: Consider the problem of high dimensional variable selection for the Gaussian linear model when the unknown error variance is also of interest. In this paper, we show that the use of conjugate shrinkage priors for Bayesian variable selection can have detrimental consequences for such variance estimation. Such priors are often motivated by the invariance argument of Jeffreys (1961). Revisiting this work, however, we highlight a caveat that Jeffreys himself noticed; namely that biased estimators can result from inducing dependence between parameters a priori . In a similar way, we show that conjugate priors for linear regression, which induce prior dependence, can lead to such underestimation in the Bayesian high-dimensional regression setting. Following Jeffreys, we recommend as a remedy to treat regression coefficients and the error variance as independent a priori . Using such an independence prior framework, we extend the Spike-and-Slab Lasso of Ročková and George (2018) to the unknown variance case. This extended procedure outperforms both the fixed variance approach and alternative penalized likelihood methods on simulated data. On the protein activity dataset of Clyde and Parmigiani (1998), the Spike-and-Slab Lasso with unknown variance achieves lower cross-validation error than alternative penalized likelihood methods, demonstrating the gains in predictive accuracy afforded by simultaneous error variance estimation. The unknown variance implementation of the Spike-and-Slab Lasso is provided in the publicly available R package SSLASSO (Ročková and Moran, 2017). Full Article
anc Separable covariance arrays via the Tucker product, with applications to multivariate relational data By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Wed, 13 Jun 2012 14:27 EDT Peter D. HoffSource: Bayesian Anal., Volume 6, Number 2, 179--196.Abstract: Modern datasets are often in the form of matrices or arrays, potentially having correlations along each set of data indices. For example, data involving repeated measurements of several variables over time may exhibit temporal correlation as well as correlation among the variables. A possible model for matrix-valued data is the class of matrix normal distributions, which is parametrized by two covariance matrices, one for each index set of the data. In this article we discuss an extension of the matrix normal model to accommodate multidimensional data arrays, or tensors. We show how a particular array-matrix product can be used to generate the class of array normal distributions having separable covariance structure. We derive some properties of these covariance structures and the corresponding array normal distributions, and show how the array-matrix product can be used to define a semi-conjugate prior distribution and calculate the corresponding posterior distribution. We illustrate the methodology in an analysis of multivariate longitudinal network data which take the form of a four-way array. Full Article
anc Statistical Inference for the Evolutionary History of Cancer Genomes By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Tue, 03 Mar 2020 04:00 EST Khanh N. Dinh, Roman Jaksik, Marek Kimmel, Amaury Lambert, Simon Tavaré. Source: Statistical Science, Volume 35, Number 1, 129--144.Abstract: Recent years have seen considerable work on inference about cancer evolution from mutations identified in cancer samples. Much of the modeling work has been based on classical models of population genetics, generalized to accommodate time-varying cell population size. Reverse-time, genealogical views of such models, commonly known as coalescents, have been used to infer aspects of the past of growing populations. Another approach is to use branching processes, the simplest scenario being the classical linear birth-death process. Inference from evolutionary models of DNA often exploits summary statistics of the sequence data, a common one being the so-called Site Frequency Spectrum (SFS). In a bulk tumor sequencing experiment, we can estimate for each site at which a novel somatic point mutation has arisen, the proportion of cells that carry that mutation. These numbers are then grouped into collections of sites which have similar mutant fractions. We examine how the SFS based on birth-death processes differs from those based on the coalescent model. This may stem from the different sampling mechanisms in the two approaches. However, we also show that despite this, they are quantitatively comparable for the range of parameters typical for tumor cell populations. We also present a model of tumor evolution with selective sweeps, and demonstrate how it may help in understanding the history of a tumor as well as the influence of data pre-processing. We illustrate the theory with applications to several examples from The Cancer Genome Atlas tumors. Full Article
anc Risk Models for Breast Cancer and Their Validation By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Tue, 03 Mar 2020 04:00 EST Adam R. Brentnall, Jack Cuzick. Source: Statistical Science, Volume 35, Number 1, 14--30.Abstract: Strategies to prevent cancer and diagnose it early when it is most treatable are needed to reduce the public health burden from rising disease incidence. Risk assessment is playing an increasingly important role in targeting individuals in need of such interventions. For breast cancer many individual risk factors have been well understood for a long time, but the development of a fully comprehensive risk model has not been straightforward, in part because there have been limited data where joint effects of an extensive set of risk factors may be estimated with precision. In this article we first review the approach taken to develop the IBIS (Tyrer–Cuzick) model, and describe recent updates. We then review and develop methods to assess calibration of models such as this one, where the risk of disease allowing for competing mortality over a long follow-up time or lifetime is estimated. The breast cancer risk model model and calibration assessment methods are demonstrated using a cohort of 132,139 women attending mammography screening in the State of Washington, USA. Full Article
anc User-Friendly Covariance Estimation for Heavy-Tailed Distributions By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Fri, 11 Oct 2019 04:03 EDT Yuan Ke, Stanislav Minsker, Zhao Ren, Qiang Sun, Wen-Xin Zhou. Source: Statistical Science, Volume 34, Number 3, 454--471.Abstract: We provide a survey of recent results on covariance estimation for heavy-tailed distributions. By unifying ideas scattered in the literature, we propose user-friendly methods that facilitate practical implementation. Specifically, we introduce elementwise and spectrumwise truncation operators, as well as their $M$-estimator counterparts, to robustify the sample covariance matrix. Different from the classical notion of robustness that is characterized by the breakdown property, we focus on the tail robustness which is evidenced by the connection between nonasymptotic deviation and confidence level. The key insight is that estimators should adapt to the sample size, dimensionality and noise level to achieve optimal tradeoff between bias and robustness. Furthermore, to facilitate practical implementation, we propose data-driven procedures that automatically calibrate the tuning parameters. We demonstrate their applications to a series of structured models in high dimensions, including the bandable and low-rank covariance matrices and sparse precision matrices. Numerical studies lend strong support to the proposed methods. Full Article
anc The Importance of Being Clustered: Uncluttering the Trends of Statistics from 1970 to 2015 By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Thu, 18 Jul 2019 22:01 EDT Laura Anderlucci, Angela Montanari, Cinzia Viroli. Source: Statistical Science, Volume 34, Number 2, 280--300.Abstract: In this paper, we retrace the recent history of statistics by analyzing all the papers published in five prestigious statistical journals since 1970, namely: The Annals of Statistics , Biometrika , Journal of the American Statistical Association , Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series B and Statistical Science . The aim is to construct a kind of “taxonomy” of the statistical papers by organizing and clustering them in main themes. In this sense being identified in a cluster means being important enough to be uncluttered in the vast and interconnected world of the statistical research. Since the main statistical research topics naturally born, evolve or die during time, we will also develop a dynamic clustering strategy, where a group in a time period is allowed to migrate or to merge into different groups in the following one. Results show that statistics is a very dynamic and evolving science, stimulated by the rise of new research questions and types of data. Full Article
anc Generalized Multiple Importance Sampling By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Fri, 12 Apr 2019 04:00 EDT Víctor Elvira, Luca Martino, David Luengo, Mónica F. Bugallo. Source: Statistical Science, Volume 34, Number 1, 129--155.Abstract: Importance sampling (IS) methods are broadly used to approximate posterior distributions or their moments. In the standard IS approach, samples are drawn from a single proposal distribution and weighted adequately. However, since the performance in IS depends on the mismatch between the targeted and the proposal distributions, several proposal densities are often employed for the generation of samples. Under this multiple importance sampling (MIS) scenario, extensive literature has addressed the selection and adaptation of the proposal distributions, interpreting the sampling and weighting steps in different ways. In this paper, we establish a novel general framework with sampling and weighting procedures when more than one proposal is available. The new framework encompasses most relevant MIS schemes in the literature, and novel valid schemes appear naturally. All the MIS schemes are compared and ranked in terms of the variance of the associated estimators. Finally, we provide illustrative examples revealing that, even with a good choice of the proposal densities, a careful interpretation of the sampling and weighting procedures can make a significant difference in the performance of the method. Full Article
anc Comment: Contributions of Model Features to BART Causal Inference Performance Using ACIC 2016 Competition Data By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Fri, 12 Apr 2019 04:00 EDT Nicole Bohme Carnegie. Source: Statistical Science, Volume 34, Number 1, 90--93.Abstract: With a thorough exposition of the methods and results of the 2016 Atlantic Causal Inference Competition, Dorie et al. have set a new standard for reproducibility and comparability of evaluations of causal inference methods. In particular, the open-source R package aciccomp2016, which permits reproduction of all datasets used in the competition, will be an invaluable resource for evaluation of future methodological developments. Building upon results from Dorie et al., we examine whether a set of potential modifications to Bayesian Additive Regression Trees (BART)—multiple chains in model fitting, using the propensity score as a covariate, targeted maximum likelihood estimation (TMLE), and computing symmetric confidence intervals—have a stronger impact on bias, RMSE, and confidence interval coverage in combination than they do alone. We find that bias in the estimate of SATT is minimal, regardless of the BART formulation. For purposes of CI coverage, however, all proposed modifications are beneficial—alone and in combination—but use of TMLE is least beneficial for coverage and results in considerably wider confidence intervals. Full Article
anc Cancer / design : Biman Mullick. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: [London?], 6th November 1989. Full Article
anc The 2019 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show Is Canceled After Facing Backlash for Lack of Body Diversity By www.health.com Published On :: Fri, 22 Nov 2019 13:30:29 -0500 The reaction on social media has been fierce. Full Article
anc Physical Exercise Prevents Stress-Induced Activation of Granule Neurons and Enhances Local Inhibitory Mechanisms in the Dentate Gyrus By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2013-05-01 Timothy J. SchoenfeldMay 1, 2013; 33:7770-7777BehavioralSystemsCognitive Full Article
anc Advances in Enteric Neurobiology: The "Brain" in the Gut in Health and Disease By www.jneurosci.org Published On :: 2018-10-31 Subhash KulkarniOct 31, 2018; 38:9346-9354Symposium and Mini-Symposium Full Article