Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
416926 Computational Statistics & Data Analysis 2006 29 Pages PDF
Abstract

Models for incomplete longitudinal data under missingness not at random have gained some popularity. At the same time, cautionary remarks have been issued regarding their sensitivity to often unverifiable modeling assumptions. Consequently, there is evidence for a shift towards using ignorable methodology, supplemented with sensitivity analyses to explore the impact of potential deviations of this assumption in the direction of missingness at random. One such tool is local influence. It is shown that local influence tends to pick up a lot of different anomalies in the data at hand, not just deviations in the MNAR mechanism. This particular behavior is described and insight offered in terms of the non-standard behavior of the likelihood ratio test statistic for MAR missingness versus MNAR missingness within a model of the Diggle and Kenward type.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computational Theory and Mathematics
Authors
, , , , , ,