Why and When "Flawed" Social Network Analyses Still Yield Valid Tests of no Contagion
Year of publication: |
2012
|
---|---|
Authors: | VanderWeele, Tyler J. ; Ogburn, Elizabeth L. ; Tchetgen Tchetgen, Eric J. |
Published in: |
Statistics, Politics, and Policy. - De Gruyter, ISSN 2151-7509, ZDB-ID 2598407-X. - Vol. 3.2012, 1
|
Publisher: |
De Gruyter |
Subject: | confounding | contagion | dependence | social influence | social networks |
-
Comment on "Why and When 'Flawed' Social Network Analyses Still Yield Valid Tests of no Contagion"
Shalizi, Cosma Rohilla, (2012)
-
Aggregative efficiency of Bayesian learning in networks
Dasaratha, Krishna, (2021)
-
Students’ dependence on smartphones and its effect on purchasing behavior
Arif, Imtiaz, (2016)
- More ...
-
Bias attenuation results for nondifferentially mismeasured ordinal and coarsened confounders
Ogburn, Elizabeth L., (2013)
-
Effect partitioning under interference in two-stage randomized vaccine trials
VanderWeele, Tyler J., (2011)
-
The Magnitude and Direction of Collider Bias for Binary Variables
Nguyen, Trang Quynh, (2019)
- More ...