Hi List,
What is the best way to determine the optimal data value from a scale level variable and relative to a binary outcome variable? Specifically what I'm looking for here is a value or cut point on the scale variable above which we start to see an increase in the incidence of X. An example might be the optimal psi reading at which artificial corneas burst. Or, what is the optimal proportion of the pelvis irradiated at 20 Gy above which we start to see an increase in the incidence of toxicities? I know there is a statistical application available (http://www.apa.org/software/odt/) but I was hoping SPSS could do this. Can anyone offer advise? Thanks, John Norton Biostatistician Oncology Institute Loyola University Medical Center (708) 327-3095 [hidden email] "Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence" |
Hi John
You know, what you describe looks a lot like ROC analysis. Why do you want to use a different tool? What is the advantage of using that ODA methodology? Monday, September 18, 2006, 7:32:58 PM, You wrote: JN> What is the best way to determine the optimal data value from JN> a scale level variable and relative to a binary outcome variable? JN> Specifically what I'm looking for here is a value or cut point on JN> the scale variable above which we start to see an increase in the JN> incidence of X. An example might be the optimal psi reading at JN> which artificial corneas burst. Or, what is the optimal proportion JN> of the pelvis irradiated at 20 Gy above which we start to see an JN> increase in the incidence of toxicities? JN> I know there is a statistical application available JN> (http://www.apa.org/software/odt/) but I was hoping SPSS could do JN> this. Can anyone offer advise? JN> "Absence of evidence JN> is not evidence of absence" (Douglas G Altman and Martin J Bland, BMJ 1995;311:485 & BMJ 2004;328:476-477, I like those two papers a lot, and I cite them constantly too) -- Regards, Dr. Marta García-Granero,PhD mailto:[hidden email] Statistician --- "It is unwise to use a statistical procedure whose use one does not understand. SPSS syntax guide cannot supply this knowledge, and it is certainly no substitute for the basic understanding of statistics and statistical thinking that is essential for the wise choice of methods and the correct interpretation of their results". (Adapted from WinPepi manual - I'm sure Joe Abrahmson will not mind) |
In reply to this post by John Norton
John,
The ODA package by Yarnold and Soltysik implements "optimal discriminant analysis." This finds a cutpoint that minimizes errors in assignment to the groups via a linear programming approach. Some ways for you to find this sort of cutpoint might include: discriminant analysis, logistic regression, or a CART-like procedure that does binary splits. Whether any of these do what you want - find "a value or cut point on the scale variable above which we start to see an increase in the incidence of X" - isn't clear to me. -----Original Message----- From: SPSSX(r) Discussion [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of John Norton Sent: Monday, September 18, 2006 12:33 PM To: [hidden email] Subject: Optimal Data Analysis Hi List, What is the best way to determine the optimal data value from a scale level variable and relative to a binary outcome variable? Specifically what I'm looking for here is a value or cut point on the scale variable above which we start to see an increase in the incidence of X. An example might be the optimal psi reading at which artificial corneas burst. Or, what is the optimal proportion of the pelvis irradiated at 20 Gy above which we start to see an increase in the incidence of toxicities? I know there is a statistical application available (http://www.apa.org/software/odt/) but I was hoping SPSS could do this. Can anyone offer advise? Thanks, John Norton Biostatistician Oncology Institute Loyola University Medical Center (708) 327-3095 [hidden email] "Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence" |
Free forum by Nabble | Edit this page |