2017
DOI: 10.1186/s12874-017-0417-2
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Towards evidence-based computational statistics: lessons from clinical research on the role and design of real-data benchmark studies

Abstract: BackgroundThe goal of medical research is to develop interventions that are in some sense superior, with respect to patient outcome, to interventions currently in use. Similarly, the goal of research in methodological computational statistics is to develop data analysis tools that are themselves superior to the existing tools. The methodology of the evaluation of medical interventions continues to be discussed extensively in the literature and it is now well accepted that medicine should be at least partly “ev… Show more

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Cited by 52 publications
(90 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
(35 reference statements)
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“…Independent of the problem of fishing for significance, it is important that the criteria for inclusion in the benchmarking experiment are clearly stated as recently discussed [11]. In our study, we consider simple datasets’ characteristics, also termed “meta-features”.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Independent of the problem of fishing for significance, it is important that the criteria for inclusion in the benchmarking experiment are clearly stated as recently discussed [11]. In our study, we consider simple datasets’ characteristics, also termed “meta-features”.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Neutrality and equal expertise would be much more difficult if not impossible to ensure if several variants of RF (including tuning strategies) and logistic regression were included in the study. Further discussions of the concept of authors’ neutrality can be found elsewhere [5, 11]. …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Deriving theoretical results for statistical approaches relevant in practice is extremely difficult and possible only under strong assumptions (Picard & Cook, 1984). We speculate that authors assessing the theoretical properties of their new method tend to make assumptions that are rather favorable for the new method-also a form of bias.In contrast, neutral comparison studies, as defined by Boulesteix, Wilson, and Hapfelmeier (2017a), are dedicated to the comparison itself: they do not aim to demonstrate the superiority of a particular method and are thus not designed in a way that may increase the probability to observe incorrectly this superiority. Furthermore, they involve authors who are, as a collective, approximately equally competent on all considered methods.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast, neutral comparison studies, as defined by Boulesteix, Wilson, and Hapfelmeier (2017a), are dedicated to the comparison itself: they do not aim to demonstrate the superiority of a particular method and are thus not designed in a way that may increase the probability to observe incorrectly this superiority. Furthermore, they involve authors who are, as a collective, approximately equally competent on all considered methods.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%