Higher-order evidence

Stephen R. Cole, Bonnie E. Shook-Sa, Paul N. Zivich, Jessie K. Edwards, David B. Richardson, Michael G. Hudgens

European Journal of Epidemiology(2024)

引用 15|浏览7
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摘要
Higher-order evidence is evidence about evidence. Epidemiologic examples of higher-order evidence include the settings where the study data constitute first-order evidence and estimates of misclassification comprise the second-order evidence (e.g., sensitivity, specificity) of a binary exposure or outcome collected in the main study. While sampling variability in higher-order evidence is typically acknowledged, higher-order evidence is often assumed to be free of measurement error (e.g., gold standard measures). Here we provide two examples, each with multiple scenarios where second-order evidence is imperfectly measured, and this measurement error can either amplify or attenuate standard corrections to first-order evidence. We propose a way to account for such imperfections that requires third-order evidence. Further illustrations and exploration of how higher-order evidence impacts results of epidemiologic studies is warranted.
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关键词
Bias,Error,Measurement,Misclassification,Statistics,Validation data
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