STA 312: Survival Analysis

University of Toronto Mississauga, Spring 2019

http://utstat.toronto.edu/~brunner/312s19

Lecture: Monday 11:10 - 1:00 and Wednesday 11:10 - 12:00 in NE 1190

Note: Jerry does not read his email every day. It is much more efficient to talk with him before or after class, or during office hours.

Tutorial: Monday 7:10-8:00 p.m. in Davis 2080

Text: Applied survival analysis using R by Dirk F. Moore. It is a free download from the U of T library. Additional reading material is available on the course home page.

Topics: Maximum likelihood, Censoring, Survival function, Distributions, Hazard and cumulative hazard function, Parametric analysis for a single sample, Life tables, Kapan-Meier estimates, Parametric regression for censored data, Proportional hazards model, Time-varying covariates. R will be used for computation.

Prerequisites: STA260. STA302 is recommended.

Grading: Marks will be based on equally weighted weekly quizzes given in tutorial, and a comprehensive final exam. The quiz average counts for 60% of the mark, and the final exam is worth 40%. Quizzes will be given in tutorial every Monday starting January 14th. Quiz dates are Jan. 14, 21, 28 Feb. 4, 11, 25, March 4, 11, 18, 25 and April 1 -- for a total of 11 quizzes. The lowest quiz mark will be dropped.

In spite of the mark weighting scheme above, a good performance on the final exam can save a student from failing the course. Suppose your final average including the final exam is less than 50%. If your mark on the final exam is at least 70%, or your mark on the final is at or above the class median, then you get a mark of 50% for the course. This rule is intended to give hope to students who have messed up on the quizzes, and encourage them to study for the final exam.

There will be an assignment for each quiz. The knowledge you need to do each quiz is a subset of the knowledge you need to do the corresponding assignment. Some (most) of the assignments include a computer part. You will bring printouts to the quiz and answer questions based on the printouts. Possibly, one of the quiz questions will be to hand in a printout. The non-computer parts of the assignments are just to prepare you for the quizzes; they will never be handed in.

Policy for missed work: If you miss a quiz, the mark is zero. However, your lowest quiz mark will be dropped. If you miss a quiz with a valid excuse, your mark on the final exam (out of 10) will be substituted for the missing quiz mark, and the lowest remaining mark will still be dropped. If you believe you have a valid excuse for missing term work, please see Jerry (not the TA) in person during office hours or before or after class.

What is a valid excuse? Here are some guidelines. If you miss a quiz for medical reasons, you must submit a University of Toronto Medical Certificate (not just a note), available at

http://www.illnessverification.utoronto.ca.

The certificate must include the statement that you were unable to write the test or quiz for medical reasons. If the certificate does not clearly state that you were unable to function, the excuse will not be accepted. Documentation must show that the physician was consulted on the day of the quiz, or on the next day. A statement merely confirming a report of illness made by the student is not acceptable.

On the other extreme, automotive breakdown or other transportation problems are never valid excuses. If you miss term work because you are taking another class at the same time as this one, that is not a valid excuse. The printer jammed, my dog ate it, etc. fall into the same category. If the University is officially open, weather is a valid excuse only if more than 50% of the class miss the quiz.

Academic Honesty: It is an academic offence to present someone else's work as your own, or to allow your work to be copied for this purpose. To repeat: the person who allows her/his work to be copied is equally guilty, and subject to disciplinary action by the university.

The main rule is don't copy, and don't let anyone else copy from you. You are expected to do the work yourself, and then perhaps compare numerical answers after you have done so. A good rule is to never help someone who hasn't started yet.

Here are some guidelines that apply to the computer assignments. If there is a problem with plagiarism, it will probably happen here, since computer printouts may be handed in.

If this is not clear enough, the latest version of the student handout "How not to Plagiarize" is available at http://www.writing.utoronto.ca/advice/using-sources/how-not-to-plagiarize The Academic Regulations of the University are outlined in the Code of Behaviour on Academic matters, which can be found in the Arts and Science Calendar or on the web at http://www.governingcouncil.utoronto.ca/policies/behaveac.htm.

   

Accessibility Needs: We are committed to accessibility. If you require accommodations for a disability, or have any accessibility concerns about the course, the classroom or course materials, please contact Jerry or Accessibility Services (visit http://www.utm.utoronto.ca/accessability or email accessconfirm.utm@utoronto.ca) as soon as possible.