Wrestling with Sample Selection Bias in Family Migration Research
William A.V.Clark, Geography, UCLA
05/09/2001
Wrestling with Sample Selection Bias in Family Migration Research
Suzanne Withers, Geography, University of Washington
05/09/2001
The Dimensions of Voting on the U.S. Supreme Court
Andrew D. Martin, Political Science, University of St. Louis
05/02/2001
The Dimensions of Voting on the U.S. Supreme Court
Kevin Quinn, Political Science, University of Washington
05/02/2001
Combining Survey and Population Data for Estimation and Simulation of Demographic Processes
Michael Rendall, Sociology, Pennsylvania State University
04/25/2001
Accountability: Measuring the Effect and Effectiveness of the Regulation of Air Quality
Gerald Van Belle, Biostatistics and Environmental Health, University of Washington
04/18/2001
The Coevolution of Individual Behaviors and Social Institutions
Astrid Hopfensitz, Mathematics, University of Ulm
04/12/2001
The Coevolution of Individual Behaviors and Social Institutions
Samuel Bowles, Behavioral Sciences Program, Santa Fe Institute
04/12/2001
Statistical Inference for Deterministic Simulation Models: The Bayesian Melding Approach
Adrian Raftery, Statistics and Sociology, University of Washington
04/11/2001
Ecological Inference For 2 x 2 Tables
Jon Wakefield, Biostatistics and Statistics, University of Washington
04/04/2001
Selection of Statistical Models: Approaches and Comparisons
Jouni Kuha, Penn State University
03/14/2001
Regression Models for Networks
Anthony Rossini, Biostatistics, University of Washington
03/07/2001
Loss Functions for Estimation of Extremes in Disease Mapping
Hal Stern, Statistics, Iowa State University
03/06/2001
Nonparametric Estimation of the Time to the Discovery of a New Specie
Nicolas Hengartner, Yale University
03/05/2001
Bayesian Inference for Structural Equation Models with Incomplete Data
Hal Stern, Statistics, Iowa State University
03/05/2001
Assessing Environmental Justice in New York City
Nicolas Hengartner, Yale University
03/02/2001
Spatial Models of International Conflicts
Kristian Gleditsch, Universityof Glasgow
02/28/2001
Spatial Models of International Conflicts
Patrick Heagerty, Biostatistics, Universityof Glasgow
02/28/2001
Spatial Models of International Conflicts
Michael Ward, Political Science, University of Washington
02/28/2001
Modeling Information, Access, and Choice in Two-Sided Markets
Peter Hoff, Statistics, University of Washington
02/21/2001
Designs and Analyses of Case-Control and Case-Cohort Studies: Applications to Prognosis of Wilms Tumor Patients
Norm Breslow, Biostatistics, University of Washington
02/14/2001
Simulating the Effects of Urban Land Use and Transportation Policies: An Exploration of Potential Applications for Bayesian and Spatial Statistical Methods
Paul Waddell, Urban Design and Planning, Evans School of Public Affairs, University of Washington
01/31/2001
Models and Inference for Social Networks
Mark Handcock, Sociology and Statistics, University of Washington
01/24/2001
How to Measure 'What People Do For a Living' in Research on the Socioeconomic Correlates of Health
Daphne Kuo, Sociology, University of Washington
01/17/2001
The Relationship Between Permanent and Transitory Components of Recession
Dick Startz, Economics, University of Washington
01/10/2001
Apportionment Methods in Proportional Representation: A Majorization Representation
Ingram Olkin, Statistics, Stanford University
11/29/2000
Causal effects, Regression and Path Diagrams
Thomas Richardson, Statistics, University of Washington
11/22/2000
Modeling Social Diffusion Using Geostatistics: Finding the Causes of Fertility Decline
Fadoua Balabdaoui, CSDE, University of Washington
11/15/2000
Modeling Social Diffusion Using Geostatistics: Finding the Causes of Fertility Decline
Adrian Raftery, Statistics & Sociology, University of Washington
11/15/2000
Bayesian Thinking about Macorosociology
Bruce Western, Office of Population Research, Princeton University
11/08/2000
The Effect of Sons and Daughters on Men's Labor Supply and Wages
Elaina Rose, Economics, University of Washington
11/01/2000
On the Limitations of the Neyman-Pearson, Likelihood Ratio, and Maximum Likelihood Criteria
Michael Perlman, Statistics, University of Washington
10/25/2000
Diffusion of Innovations and Social Capital Within Organizations
Kenneth Frank, Counseling, Educational Psychology and Special Education, Michigan State University
10/18/2000
Why do households reduce consumption after retirement?
Shelly Lundberg, Economics, University of Washington
10/11/2000
Quantitative models for social networks?
Julian Besag, Statistics, University of Washington
10/04/2000
Environmental Standards from a Statistical Point of View
Peter Guttorp, Statistics, University of Washington
05/31/2000
Representation, Information, and Public Policy
Bryan Jones, Political Science, University of Washington
05/24/2000
Perspectives on Causal Inference and Longitudinal Interventions
Babette Brumback, Biostatistics, University of Washington
05/17/2000
Inference in Case-Control Studies with Limited Auxilliary Information
Gary King, Government and Center for Basic Research in the Social Sciences, Harvard University
05/10/2000
Geographical Analysis and Ethical Dilemmas in the Study of Childhood Leukemias in Great Britain
Julian Besag, Statistics, University of Washington
05/03/2000
Looking for Effects of Group Characteristics on Outcomes in Group-Based Prevention Programs
Jerald R Herting, Sociology and Psychosocial & Community Health, University of Washington
04/26/2000
Improved Inference for the Instrumental Variable Estimator or You Can't Get Something for Nothing
Dick Startz, Economics, University of Washington
04/19/2000
Problems in Sampling and Defining the Unit of Analysis in the Study of Policy Change"
Paul Burstein, Sociology, University of Washington
04/12/2000
Socio-economics of Screening for Ovarian Cancer
Martin McIntosh, Biostatistics, University of Washington
04/05/2000
Mergers and Mobility: Occupational Implications of Organizational Growth at Lloyds Bank, 1885-1940
Katherine Stovel, Sociology, University of Washington
03/08/2000
Why Do Model Ensembles Work?
Pedro Domingos, Computer Science and Engineering, University of Washington
03/01/2000
Classification by Opinion-Changing Behavior: A Mixture Model Approach"
Jennifer Hill, Statistics, Harvard University
02/25/2000
Modern Prediction Methods: Bagging and Boosting
Greg Ridgeway, Statistics, University of Washington
02/23/2000
Linking Trajectories of Childhood and Adolescent Physical Aggression: The Search for Late Onset Violence
Daniel Nagin, Heinz School of Public Policy and Management,, Carnegie Mellon University
02/16/2000
The Nature of Structural Break in the U.S. Stock Market
Chang-Jin Kim, Economics, University of Washington
02/09/2000
Crack Markets and the Diffusion of Guns Among Youth
Daniel Cork, Statistics and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon University
02/02/2000
NY School Choice: An example of the link between observational studies and randomized experiments
Jennifer Hill, Statistics, Harvard University
01/27/2000
The Evolution of Fertility in India in Time and Space
Fadoua Balabdoui, Centre de Géostatistique, Ecoles des Mines
01/26/2000
Bayesian Model Selection and Model Averaging for Social Research: Recent Results
Adrian Raftery, Statistics and Sociology, University of Washington
01/19/2000
The Marriage Model: A Two Sided Model of Opportunity and Choice
Peter Hoff, Statistics, University of Washington
01/12/2000
An Empirically Accurate Computation Model of Multiparty Electoral Competition
Kevin Quinn, Center for Basic Research Social Science, Harvard University
12/06/1999
Socioeconomic Status and Pregnancy Outcomes: Evidence from Washington State
Irving Emmanuel, Epidemiology, University of Washington
12/01/1999
Socioeconomic Status and Pregnancy Outcomes: Evidence from Washington State
Rob Warren, Sociology, University of Washington
12/01/1999
Age-Specific Total Fecundability and Fetal Loss in Bangladeshi Women
Darryl Holman, Anthropology, University of Washington
11/24/1999
Estimating the Size of Populations
Stephen Fienberg, Statistics, Carnegie Mellon University
11/17/1999
Space and Time in War and Peace During the Last 200 years: Ongoing Investigations of Spatial Connections in a Changing Topology
Kristian Gleditsch, Political Science, University of Glasgow
11/10/1999
Space and Time in War and Peace During the Last 200 years: Ongoing Investigations of Spatial Connections in a Changing Topology
Mike Ward, Political Science, University of Washington
11/10/1999
Does "High" Equal "High Risk?" The Relationship Between Drinking and Sexual Risk Taking
Mary Gilmore, Social Work, University of Washington
11/03/1999
Why Alternative Trend-Cycle Decompositions of GDP Disagree
Charles Nelson, Economics, University of Washington
10/27/1999
The Use of Socioeconomic Measures in Spatial Epidemiology
Jon Wakefield, Statistics and Biostatistics, University of Washington
10/20/1999
Methodological Problems in Defining Comparable Data Across National Data Sets and Field Research
Elaine Thompson, School of Nursing, University of Washington
10/13/1999
Statistical Issues with Network Analysis: Applications and Problems in AIDS
Tony Rossini, Biostatistics, University of Washington
10/06/1999