Overview
The development of methods for the analysis of survival and event
history data represents a major area of focus in the statistical sciences.
Much of this work is motivated by problems in health, industry, insurance
and demography regarding the occurrence of important events. Key elements
in this work has been the use of partial likelihoods and counting
processes which deal naturally with right censoring and left truncation.
Recent interest has been on practical problems for which the classical
theory does not suffice. These include problems featuring dependent
and other incomplete observation schemes, missing covariate values,
measurement error, and the analysis of data from retrospective or
response-selective studies. In addition, models incorporating latent
variables are increasingly used and these are also not adequately
dealt with using martingales. Finally, the last twenty years has
seen a remarkable growth in the literature on multivariate survival
times, recurrent events, multistate models and more general event
history processes for complex outcomes. It has continued to grow
as such models find more and more frequent application. These and
other developments have lead to a rich array of problems for statistical
theory and methodology. New models have been proposed and many methods
of inference have been studied, including semiparametric maximum
likelihood, composite and pseudo-likelihood, estimating functions,
and Bayesian methods.
The purpose of this workshop is to bring together top international
researchers in statistics and biostatistics engaged in survival
and event history analysis to discuss recent advances and current
challenges. The aim of this workshop is to discuss areas requiring
new methodology and supporting theory.
Invited Speakers
Rebecca Betensky (Harvard School of Public Health)
Ornulf Borgan (University of Oslo)
Tianxi Cai (Harvard School of Public Health)
Nilanjan Chatterjee (National Cancer Institute)
Stephen Cole (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Somnath Datta (University of Louisville)
Peter J. Diggle (Lancaster University)
Patrick Heagerty (University of Washington)
Joseph W. Hogan (Brown University)
Li Hsu (Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center)
Joseph Ibrahim (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Jack Kalbfleisch (University of Michigan)
Yi Li (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
Danyu Lin (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Rod Little (University of Michigan)
Lyle Palmer (Ontario Institute for Cancer Research)
Ross Prentice (Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center)
Douglas E. Schaubel (University of Michigan)
Richard Simon (National Cancer Institute)
Donna Spiegelman (Harvard University)
Jeremy M G Taylor(University of Michigan)
Alice Whittemore (Stanford University School of Medicine)