FINAL REMINDER --- Applied Statistics Workshop TOMORROW (10/17) at 12 noon
Lunch provided --- All are welcome
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dear workshop community,

We will convene for the Applied Statistics Workshop (Gov 3009) this Wednesday (10/17).

The speaker is Susan Murphy (Harvard Stats + SEAS) who will be presenting her work "Stratified Micro-Randomized Trials with Applications to Mobile Health".

Where: CGIS Knafel Building, Room K354 (see this link for directions).

When: Wednesday, October 17th at 12 noon - 1:30 pm.

Abstract: Technological advancements in the field of mobile devices and wearable sensors make it possible to deliver treatments anytime and anywhere to users like you and me. Increasingly the delivery of these treatments is triggered by detections/predictions of vulnerability and receptivity. These observations are likely to have been impacted by prior treatments. Furthermore the treatments are often designed to have an impact on users over a span of time during which subsequent treatments may be provided. Here we discuss our work on the design of a mobile health smoking cessation study in which the above two challenges arose. This work involves the use of multiple online data analysis algorithms. Online algorithms are used in the detection, for example, of physiological stress. Other algorithms are used to forecast at each vulnerable time, the remaining number of vulnerable times in the day. These algorithms are then inputs into a randomization algorithm that ensures that each user is randomized to each treatment an appropriate number of times per day. We develop the stratified micro-randomized trial which involves not only the randomization algorithm but a precise statement of the meaning of the treatment effects and the primary scientific hypotheses along with primary analyses and sample size calculations. Considerations of causal inference and potential causal bias incurred by inappropriate data analyses play a large role throughout.

All are welcome! Lunch is provided!

Best,

Connor Jerzak
Applied Statistics Workshop -- Graduate Student Coordinator
An anonymous feedback form for the workshop can be found here at this link.
Workshop listserv sign-up at this link.