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William F. Rosenberger
Researcher at George Mason University
Publications - 147
Citations - 5367
William F. Rosenberger is an academic researcher from George Mason University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Restricted randomization & Randomization. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 145 publications receiving 4956 citations. Previous affiliations of William F. Rosenberger include University of Maryland, Baltimore & George Washington University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Association of fasting glucose with subclinical cerebrovascular disease in older adults without Type 2 diabetes
Regina C. Sims,Leslie I. Katzel,Leslie I. Katzel,David M. Lefkowitz,Eliot L. Siegel,William F. Rosenberger,Z. Manukyan,Keith E. Whitfield,Shari R. Waldstein,Shari R. Waldstein,Shari R. Waldstein +10 more
TL;DR: To examine how fasting glucose and glucose tolerance are related to magnetic resonance imaging‐assessed indicators of subclinical cerebrovascular disease and brain atrophy and their variation according to age, sex and education.
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On the use of generalized linear models following a sequential design
TL;DR: In this paper, conditions for the asymptotic normality of regression parameters from a generalized linear model, following a sequential design, were provided for randomized clinical trials and a quadratic regression model.
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Adaptive urn designs for estimating several percentiles of a dose--response curve.
TL;DR: This work presents the first non-parametric adaptive design approach to estimate several percentiles simultaneously via generalized Pólya urns, and shows that these multiple-objective adaptive designs are more efficient than the original single- objective adaptive design targeting the median only.
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Sociodemographic disparities in corticolimbic structures.
Danielle Shaked,Danielle Shaked,Zachary B. Millman,Danielle L. Beatty Moody,William F. Rosenberger,Hui Shao,Leslie I. Katzel,Leslie I. Katzel,Christos Davatzikos,Rao P. Gullapalli,Stephen L. Seliger,Guray Erus,Michele K. Evans,Alan B. Zonderman,Shari R. Waldstein,Shari R. Waldstein,Shari R. Waldstein +16 more
TL;DR: Among many factors, the higher levels of lifetime chronic stress associated with lower socioeconomic status and African American race may adversely affect corticolimbic circuitry, which may help explain race- and socioeconomic status-related disparities in adverse health outcomes.
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Conditional Monte Carlo randomization tests for regression models.
TL;DR: A method for computation of randomization tests based on the predicted rate of change from a generalized linear mixed model when outcomes are longitudinal is introduced, and it is shown, by simulation, that theserandomization tests preserve the size and power well under model misspecification.