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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Herbert Hoijtink , Irene Klugkist , Paul BoelenPublisher: Springer-Verlag New York Inc. Imprint: Springer-Verlag New York Inc. Edition: 2008 ed. Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.729kg ISBN: 9780387096117ISBN 10: 0387096116 Pages: 361 Publication Date: 06 October 2008 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsAn Introduction to Bayesian Evaluation of Informative Hypotheses.- An Introduction to Bayesian Evaluation of Informative Hypotheses.- Bayesian Evaluation of Informative Hypotheses.- Illustrative Psychological Data and Hypotheses for Bayesian Inequality Constrained Analysis of Variance.- Bayesian Estimation for Inequality Constrained Analysis of Variance.- Encompassing Prior Based Model Selection for Inequality Constrained Analysis of Variance.- An Evaluation of Bayesian Inequality Constrained Analysis of Variance.- A Further Study of Prior Distributions and the Bayes Factor.- Bayes Factors Based on Test Statistics Under Order Restrictions.- Objective Bayes Factors for Informative Hypotheses: “Completing” the Informative Hypothesis and “Splitting” the Bayes Factors.- The Bayes Factor Versus Other Model Selection Criteria for the Selection of Constrained Models.- Bayesian Versus Frequentist Inference.- Beyond Analysis of Variance.- Inequality Constrained Analysis of Covariance.- Inequality Constrained Latent Class Models.- Inequality Constrained Contingency Table Analysis.- Inequality Constrained Multilevel Models.- Evaluations.- A Psychologist’s View on Bayesian Evaluation of Informative Hypotheses.- A Statistician’s View on Bayesian Evaluation of Informative Hypotheses.- A Philosopher’s View on Bayesian Evaluation of Informative Hypotheses.ReviewsFrom the reviews: While this book is a collection of papers, the editors have done a great service to the reader by choosing three substantial psychology research studies that are used as examples throughout the book. The continuity of examples provides easy comparison among the methods and makes subsequent developments easier to follow. The book identifies open questions!and provides alternative methodologies with discussion. Each chapter provides a comprehensive bibliography, which makes this book an excellent reference. Statisticians and quantitative social scientists who are interested in a broad introduction and review of Bayesian methods for informative hypotheses, including several chapters of detailed statistical development, will find this book valuable. (Journal of the American Statistical Association, Mar. 2010, Vol. 105, No.489) !Bayesian evaluation for informative hypotheses was first proposed by Hoijtink (2001). The present book collects the recent developments in the area! since then. The content!is the result of written contributions from the workshop in Utrecht in June 2007. !The book is well written ! software accompanying the main topics... are available on the website. !This book is motivated largely by a number of examples in psychological and social science, resulting in the particular interest to the researchers in these fields. However researchers in other disciplines such as public health and biomedical science may find this book useful since similar questions of informative hypotheses are encountered frequently in those fields as well. The book succeeds in its aims and is undoubtedly a valuable resource for the public. I would recommend the book to psychologists and scientists in the aforementioned areas who wish to do more complicated analyses. I would also recommend this book to biostatisticians and statisticians who are keen to expand their horizons or want to attain some inspiration! . (Biometrics 65, 1308--1309, December 2009) This book has been very imaginatively planned and anchored around analysis of challenging problems of (Clinical) Psychology. Not only the analyses but the design of experiments and the variables measured are very interesting. ... This is an excellent book for psychologists and Bayesian statisticians. Strongly recommended for both categories of readers. (International Statistical Review 2009, 77, 2) The methods developed here are applicable in areas other than ANOVA, such as ANCOVA, latent class models, and contingency tables. ! For those who find ANOVA troubling ! and are not so devoted to frequentist approaches as to be troubled by the use of priors (informative or not), this book provides a way forward. If you fall into this class of readers, I highly recommend that you read this book and, when appropriate, consider using the methods described therein in your own work. (Lawrence Barker, Technometrics, Vol. 52 (3), August, 2010) While this book is a collection of papers, the editors have done a great service to the reader by choosing three substantial psychology research studies that are used as examples throughout the book. The continuity of examples provides easy comparison among the methods and makes subsequent developments easier to follow. The book identifies open questions!and provides alternative methodologies with discussion. Each chapter provides a comprehensive bibliography, which makes this book an excellent reference. Statisticians and quantitative social scientists who are interested in a broad introduction and review of Bayesian methods for informative hypotheses, including several chapters of detailed statistical development, will find this book valuable. (Journal of the American Statistical Association, Mar. 2010, Vol. 105, No.489) !Bayesian evaluation for informative hypotheses was first proposed by Hoijtink (2001). The present book collects the recent developments in the area! since then. The content!is the result of written contributions from the workshop in Utrecht in June 2007. !The book is well written ! software accompanying the main topics... are available on the website. !This book is motivated largely by a number of examples in psychological and social science, resulting in the particular interest to the researchers in these fields. However researchers in other disciplines such as public health and biomedical science may find this book useful since similar questions of informative hypotheses are encountered frequently in those fields as well. The book succeeds in its aims and is undoubtedly a valuable resource for the public. I would recommend the book to psychologists and scientists in the aforementioned areas who wish to do more complicated analyses. I would also recommend this book to biostatisticians and statisticians who are keen to expand their horizons or want to attain some inspiration! . (Biometrics 65, 1308--1309, December 2009) This book has been very imaginatively planned and anchored around analysis of challenging problems of (Clinical) Psychology. Not only the analyses but the design of experiments and the variables measured are very interesting. ... This is an excellent book for psychologists and Bayesian statisticians. Strongly recommended for both categories of readers. (International Statistical Review 2009, 77, 2) Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |