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Cox Proportional Hazards Model Marlen Roberts & Heyang Liao

Cox Proportional Hazards Model Marlen Roberts & Heyang Liao. Outline. Introduction to Survival analysis Comparison with other models Survival function Cox regression. Survival Analysis. Study time it takes for events to occur “survival” of new businesses over time

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Cox Proportional Hazards Model Marlen Roberts & Heyang Liao

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  1. Cox Proportional Hazards Model Marlen Roberts & Heyang Liao

  2. Outline • Introduction to Survival analysis • Comparison with other models • Survival function • Cox regression

  3. Survival Analysis • Study time it takes for events to occur • “survival” of new businesses over time • “survival” of machine parts under pressure • Primarily used in biological and medical research • Also widely used in social, economic & engineering research • Censored Data Values • When the study ends some events may not have occurred Source: Wikipedia.org, StatSoft

  4. Comparison with Other Methods Source: Intro. to Survival Analysis by Brian F. Gage, Oct 19 2004, Dr. Westfall

  5. Methods • Univariate • Parametric models: normal, lognormal, exponential, Weibull, … • Nonparametricmodel: Kaplan-Meier • Regression • Parametric conditional distribution models: normal, lognormal, exponential, Weibull, … • Semiparametric conditional distribution model: Cox proportional hazard

  6. Survival function Source: An Introduction to Survival Analysis by Maarten L. Buis

  7. Rossi Dataset • Study of recidivism of 432 male prisoners • Observed for 1 year after being released from prison • Information includes: • week, arrest(0/1), fin aid(yes/no), age, race, married etc • Question – how do these variables predict the time of arresting Source: Cox Proportional-Hazards Regression for Survival Data, by John Fox

  8. Rossi Dataset • Snippet of the dataset:

  9. Survival Curve • Step function • Time interval • Start at 1.0

  10. Survival Probability Distribution • 3 more ways to present the time-to-event probability distribution • Cumulative distribution Function (cdf) • Probability Density Function (pdf) • Hazard Function Source: An Introduction to Survival Analysis by Maarten L. Buis

  11. Cumulative Probability

  12. Probability Density Function

  13. Hazard Function

  14. Cox regression

  15. Assumption #1 - Semi-Parametric

  16. Assumption #1 - Semi-Parametric

  17. Assumption #1 - Semi-Parametric

  18. Assumption #2 – Proportional Hazard

  19. Alternate View Coefficient Constant relationship b/w x and y Source: http://data.princeton.edu/wws509/notes/c7.pdf (p. 12)

  20. Connection to Survival Function Source: http://data.princeton.edu/wws509/notes/c7.pdf (p. 12)

  21. Connection to Survival Function

  22. Interpretation of the model 1 year ↑ in age  -0.07161 ↓ in expected log of HR, holding other predictors constant For age: exp(-0.07161) = 0.9309. 1 year ↑ in age  6.91%(=1-0.9309) ↓ in Hazard • 22

  23. Interpretation of the model Marginal significant Not significant -coeff. is not significant different from 0 Conf. Interval Incl. 1 Age is significantly negatively related to risk of incarceration! • 23

  24. Partial likelihood • Find the value of β that best fit the data • Time factor is irrelevant  partial • Joint density function for subjects’ rank in terms of event order

  25. Partial likelihood

  26. Partial likelihood

  27. Partial likelihood P value is significant - null hypothesis that all of β’s are zero

  28. Thank you!

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