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Boosting multi-state models

Author

Listed:
  • Holger Reulen

    (University of Göttingen)

  • Thomas Kneib

    (University of Göttingen)

Abstract

One important goal in multi-state modelling is to explore information about conditional transition-type-specific hazard rate functions by estimating influencing effects of explanatory variables. This may be performed using single transition-type-specific models if these covariate effects are assumed to be different across transition-types. To investigate whether this assumption holds or whether one of the effects is equal across several transition-types (cross-transition-type effect), a combined model has to be applied, for instance with the use of a stratified partial likelihood formulation. Here, prior knowledge about the underlying covariate effect mechanisms is often sparse, especially about ineffectivenesses of transition-type-specific or cross-transition-type effects. As a consequence, data-driven variable selection is an important task: a large number of estimable effects has to be taken into account if joint modelling of all transition-types is performed. A related but subsequent task is model choice: is an effect satisfactory estimated assuming linearity, or is the true underlying nature strongly deviating from linearity? This article introduces component-wise Functional Gradient Descent Boosting (short boosting) for multi-state models, an approach performing unsupervised variable selection and model choice simultaneously within a single estimation run. We demonstrate that features and advantages in the application of boosting introduced and illustrated in classical regression scenarios remain present in the transfer to multi-state models. As a consequence, boosting provides an effective means to answer questions about ineffectiveness and non-linearity of single transition-type-specific or cross-transition-type effects.

Suggested Citation

  • Holger Reulen & Thomas Kneib, 2016. "Boosting multi-state models," Lifetime Data Analysis: An International Journal Devoted to Statistical Methods and Applications for Time-to-Event Data, Springer, vol. 22(2), pages 241-262, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:lifeda:v:22:y:2016:i:2:d:10.1007_s10985-015-9329-9
    DOI: 10.1007/s10985-015-9329-9
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. de Wreede, Liesbeth C. & Fiocco, Marta & Putter, Hein, 2011. "mstate: An R Package for the Analysis of Competing Risks and Multi-State Models," Journal of Statistical Software, Foundation for Open Access Statistics, vol. 38(i07).
    2. Benjamin Hofner & Torsten Hothorn & Thomas Kneib, 2013. "Variable selection and model choice in structured survival models," Computational Statistics, Springer, vol. 28(3), pages 1079-1101, June.
    3. Thomas Kneib & Torsten Hothorn & Gerhard Tutz, 2009. "Variable Selection and Model Choice in Geoadditive Regression Models," Biometrics, The International Biometric Society, vol. 65(2), pages 626-634, June.
    4. Schmid, Matthias & Hothorn, Torsten, 2008. "Boosting additive models using component-wise P-Splines," Computational Statistics & Data Analysis, Elsevier, vol. 53(2), pages 298-311, December.
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