Literature DB >> 25092948

Sequential Tests of Multiple Hypotheses Controlling Type I and II Familywise Error Rates.

Jay Bartroff1, Jinlin Song2.   

Abstract

This paper addresses the following general scenario: A scientist wishes to perform a battery of experiments, each generating a sequential stream of data, to investigate some phenomenon. The scientist would like to control the overall error rate in order to draw statistically-valid conclusions from each experiment, while being as efficient as possible. The between-stream data may differ in distribution and dimension but also may be highly correlated, even duplicated exactly in some cases. Treating each experiment as a hypothesis test and adopting the familywise error rate (FWER) metric, we give a procedure that sequentially tests each hypothesis while controlling both the type I and II FWERs regardless of the between-stream correlation, and only requires arbitrary sequential test statistics that control the error rates for a given stream in isolation. The proposed procedure, which we call the sequential Holm procedure because of its inspiration from Holm's (1979) seminal fixed-sample procedure, shows simultaneous savings in expected sample size and less conservative error control relative to fixed sample, sequential Bonferroni, and other recently proposed sequential procedures in a simulation study.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Clinical trials; Holm’s procedure; Multiple testing; Sequential analysis; Step-down test; Wald approximations

Year:  2014        PMID: 25092948      PMCID: PMC4118217          DOI: 10.1016/j.jspi.2014.05.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Stat Plan Inference        ISSN: 0378-3758            Impact factor:   1.111


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8.  Sequential Tests of Multiple Hypotheses Controlling Type I and II Familywise Error Rates.

Authors:  Jay Bartroff; Jinlin Song
Journal:  J Stat Plan Inference       Date:  2014-10-01       Impact factor: 1.111

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4.  Sequential Tests of Multiple Hypotheses Controlling Type I and II Familywise Error Rates.

Authors:  Jay Bartroff; Jinlin Song
Journal:  J Stat Plan Inference       Date:  2014-10-01       Impact factor: 1.111

  4 in total

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