Tim Morris

@Tim_P_Morris
316 Followers
105 Following
85 Posts
Principal research fellow at the MRC Clinical Trials Unit, UCL, working on statistical methods: which ones work well when? 
Missing data, simulation studies, estimands, covariate adjustment, meta-analysis. Stata user who carves spoons.
Google scholar profilehttps://scholar.google.com/citations?user=l6OPzY0AAAAJ&hl=en
UCL pagehttps://iris.ucl.ac.uk/iris/browse/profile?upi=TNMOR17
Google scholar seems to have discovered that commentaries are not under my funder's open acess requirements and this is so much more satisfying!
🎉
Oh you want to see where the summer school on modern methods in biostats and epi is held? Here.
Market day for the spoons today! Shared a stall with my friend Camberwell Ceramics – check out her stuff.
#HandMade #Sloyd #WoodCarving #SpoonMaker #ceramics #porcelain

‘The maraca plot: A novel visualization of hierarchical composite endpoints’.

Unintuitive and unconvincing. The description doesn't really help. Maybe it's just a hard thing to visualise. Main quibble is that the vertical separation of violins adds emphasis to the difference in S(t) at final t, when censoring often means it's very imprecisely estimated.
Your thoughts welcome, in particular @[email protected]

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/17407745221134949

This paper contains a bunch of simulation results about ‘unidirectional switch designs’. I was pleased to see Monte Carlo confidence interval attached to estimated biases.

For coverage, the authors did something strange…
Rather than doing as they did for bias, they computed a Monte Carlo 95% CI about the *nominal coverage (95%) had that been achieved with 1,000 repetitions*.
1/
https://bmcmedresmethodol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12874-022-01765-9

Comparison of analysis methods and design choices for treatment-by-period interaction in unidirectional switch designs: a simulation study - BMC Medical Research Methodology

Background Due to identifiability problems, statistical inference about treatment-by-period interactions has not been discussed for stepped wedge designs in the literature thus far. Unidirectional switch designs (USDs) generalize the stepped wedge designs and allow for estimation and testing of treatment-by-period interaction in its many flexible design forms. Methods Under different forms of the USDs, we simulated binary data at both aggregated and individual levels and studied the performances of the generalized linear mixed model (GLMM) and the marginal model with generalized estimation equations (GEE) for estimating and testing treatment-by-period interactions. Results The parallel group design had the highest power for detecting the treatment-by-period interactions. While there was no substantial difference between aggregated-level and individual-level analysis, the GLMM had better point estimates than the marginal model with GEE. Furthermore, the optimal USD for estimating the average treatment effect was not efficient for treatment-by-period interaction and the marginal model with GEE required a substantial number of clusters to yield unbiased estimates of the interaction parameters when the correlation structure is autoregressive of order 1 (AR1). On the other hand, marginal model with GEE had better coverages than GLMM under the AR1 correlation structure. Conclusion From the designs and methods evaluated, in general, parallel group design with a GLMM is, preferred for estimation and testing of treatment-by-period interaction in a clustered randomized controlled trial for a binary outcome.

BioMed Central
I’ve made it!
Rhian finally made the answer to my question clear, a year later.
Rhian Daniel (Cardiff) presenting the most enigmatic title of the day: Regression by composition. Really looking forward to this one.
Prof Bhramar Mukherjee is wearing the lasso/ridge dress!
What a presenter.
Yess we’re talking about sufficiency. Love a bit of sufficiency. Also ancillarity.
Autumn spoon display. Got some milk paint on them too add a bit of colour for a market in a couple of weeks.