Research Output
A comparison of missing value imputation methods for classifying patient outcome following trauma injury.
  A study is designed to compare several missing value imputation methods to enable classification of patient outcome following trauma injury. The Glasgow coma score is a measure of head injury severity, and is known to be important in determining patient outcome. The Glasgow coma scores are missing for 12% of the dataset, and in order to classify patient outcome for these patients, the missing values are first imputed. The first part of the study is designed to compare the performance of several missing value imputation methods, and errors between imputed values and known values of Glasgow coma scores are calculated. The second part of the study involves analysing the imputed data sets using logistic regression to classify whether patients live or die. Accuracy of results are compared in terms of sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value.

  • Date:

    31 December 2008

  • Publication Status:

    Published

  • DOI:

    10.1109/ITI.2008.4588437

  • Library of Congress:

    QA75 Electronic computers. Computer science

Citation

Penny, K. I., & Chesney, T. (2008). A comparison of missing value imputation methods for classifying patient outcome following trauma injury. In ITI 2008 - 30th International Conference on Information Technology Interfaces, 367-370. https://doi.org/10.1109/ITI.2008.4588437

Authors

Keywords

Logistic regression; missing value imputation; trauma injury;

Monthly Views:

Available Documents