64 research outputs found
LHWCA Section 905(b) and Scindia: The Confused Tale of a Legal Pendulum
The article presents the U.S. Supreme Court case Scindia Steam Navigation Co., Ltd. v. De Los Santos to discuss Section 905(b) of the Longshore and Harbor Workers\u27 Compensation Act (LHWCA), which provided negligence as a course of action in advancing workers\u27 compensation claims
Variational Bayes latent class approach for EHR-based phenotyping with large real-world data
Bayesian approaches to clinical analyses for the purposes of patient
phenotyping have been limited by the computational challenges associated with
applying the Markov-Chain Monte-Carlo (MCMC) approach to large real-world data.
Approximate Bayesian inference via optimization of the variational evidence
lower bound, often called Variational Bayes (VB), has been successfully
demonstrated for other applications. We investigate the performance and
characteristics of currently available R and Python VB software for variational
Bayesian Latent Class Analysis (LCA) of realistically large real-world
observational data. We used a real-world data set, Optum\textsuperscript{TM}
electronic health records (EHR), containing pediatric patients with risk
indicators for type 2 diabetes mellitus that is a rare form in pediatric
patients. The aim of this work is to validate a Bayesian patient phenotyping
model for generality and extensibility and crucially that it can be applied to
a realistically large real-world clinical data set. We find currently available
automatic VB methods are very sensitive to initial starting conditions, model
definition, algorithm hyperparameters and choice of gradient optimiser. The
Bayesian LCA model was challenging to implement using VB but we achieved
reasonable results with very good computational performance compared to MCMC.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures. Supplementary material available on reques
The 1988 referendums and Australia's record on Constitutional change. by Brian Galligan
The referendum procedure requires that amendment proposals be first passed by both Houses of the Commonwealth Parliament, or alternatively twice by on House after a three months interval should the other House reject or fail to pass the proposed law.
Regularising the Australian Republic. by Brian Galligan
tag=1 data=Regularising the Australian Republic. by Brian Galligan
tag=2 data=Galligan, Brian
tag=3 data=Australian Journal of Political Science,
tag=4 data=28
tag=6 data=Special Issue, 1993
tag=7 data=56-66.
tag=8 data=CONSTITUTION
tag=9 data=MONARCHIC SYMBOLS
tag=13 data=IN
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