$Q$- and $A$-Learning Methods for Estimating Optimal Dynamic Treatment Regimes
Schulte, Phillip J., Tsiatis, Anastasios A., Laber, Eric B., Davidian, Marie
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
In clinical practice, physicians make a series of treatment decisions over the course of a patient's disease based on his/her baseline and evolving characteristics. A dynamic treatment regime is a set of sequential decision rules that operationalizes this process. Each rule corresponds to a decision point and dictates the next treatment action based on the accrued information. Using existing data, a key goal is estimating the optimal regime, that, if followed by the patient population, would yield the most favorable outcome on average. Q- and A-learning are two main approaches for this purpose. We provide a detailed account of these methods, study their performance, and illustrate them using data from a depression study.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Feb-3-2015
- Country:
- North America > United States > North Carolina (0.29)
- Genre:
- Research Report > Experimental Study (0.93)
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- Technology: