Title of article :
Statistics in Biomedical Laboratory and Clinical Science: Applications, Issues and Pitfalls
Author/Authors :
Ludbrook, John University of Melbourne - Department of Surgery, Australia
From page :
1
To page :
13
Abstract :
This review is directed at biomedical scientists who want to gain a better understanding of statistics: what tests to use, when, and why. In my view, even during the planning stage of a study it is very important to seek the advice of a qualified biostatistician. When designing and analyzing a study, it is important to construct and test global hypotheses, rather than to make multiple tests on the data. If the latter cannot be avoided, it is essential to control the risk of making false-positive inferences by applying multiple comparison procedures. For comparing two means or two proportions, it is best to use exact permutation tests rather then the better known, classical, ones. For comparing many means, analysis of variance, often of a complex type, is the most powerful approach. The correlation coefficient should never be used to compare the performances of two methods of measurement, or two measurers, because it does not detect bias. Instead the Altman-Bland method of differences or least-products linear regression analysis should be preferred. Finally, the educational value to investigators of interaction with a biostatistician, before, during and after a study, cannot be overemphasized.
Keywords :
Biostatistician , Exact tests , Global tests , Missing values , Multiple comparisons , Outliers , Permutation tests , Randomization
Journal title :
Medical Principles and Practice
Journal title :
Medical Principles and Practice
Record number :
2694541
Link To Document :
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