How can environmental regulators use information on 48-hour toxicity tests to predict the effects of a few minutes of pollution? Or, at the other extreme, what is the relevance of 96-hour toxicity data for organisms that may have been exposed to a pollutant for six months or more? Time to event methods are the key to answering these types of questi
Risk Assessment with Time to Event Models - Mark Crane, Michael C. Newman, Peter F. Chapman & John S. Fenlon
By Mark Crane, Michael C. Newman, Peter F. Chapman & John S. Fenlon
How can environmental regulators use information on 48-hour toxicity tests to predict the effects of a few minutes of pollution? Or, at the other extreme, what is the relevance of 96-hour toxicity data for organisms that may have been exposed to a pollutant for six months or more? Time to event methods are the key to answering these types of questi
More by Mark Crane, Michael C. Newman, Peter F. Chapman & John S. Fenlon