Pablo Martínez-Camblor, Sonia Pérez-Fernández, Susana Díaz-Coto
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引用次数: 10
Abstract
The receiver operating-characteristic (ROC) curve is a well-known graphical tool routinely used for evaluating the discriminatory ability of continuous markers, referring to a binary characteristic. The area under the curve (AUC) has been proposed as a summarized accuracy index. Higher values of the marker are usually associated with higher probabilities of having the characteristic under study. However, there are other situations where both, higher and lower marker scores, are associated with a positive result. The generalized ROC (gROC) curve has been proposed as a proper extension of the ROC curve to fit these situations. Of course, the corresponding area under the gROC curve, gAUC, has also been introduced as a global measure of the classification capacity. In this paper, we study in deep the gAUC properties. The weak convergence of its empirical estimator is provided while deriving an explicit and useful expression for the asymptotic variance. We also obtain the expression for the asymptotic covariance of related gAUCs and propose a non-parametric procedure to compare them. The finite-samples behavior is studied through Monte Carlo simulations under different scenarios, presenting a real-world problem in order to illustrate its practical application. The R code functions implementing the procedures are provided as Supplementary Material.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Biostatistics (IJB) seeks to publish new biostatistical models and methods, new statistical theory, as well as original applications of statistical methods, for important practical problems arising from the biological, medical, public health, and agricultural sciences with an emphasis on semiparametric methods. Given many alternatives to publish exist within biostatistics, IJB offers a place to publish for research in biostatistics focusing on modern methods, often based on machine-learning and other data-adaptive methodologies, as well as providing a unique reading experience that compels the author to be explicit about the statistical inference problem addressed by the paper. IJB is intended that the journal cover the entire range of biostatistics, from theoretical advances to relevant and sensible translations of a practical problem into a statistical framework. Electronic publication also allows for data and software code to be appended, and opens the door for reproducible research allowing readers to easily replicate analyses described in a paper. Both original research and review articles will be warmly received, as will articles applying sound statistical methods to practical problems.