N.-Y.: Wiley, 2014. — 272 p.
A practical and clarifying approach to aging and aging-related diseases
Providing a thorough and extensive theoretical framework, The Biostatistics of Aging: From Gompertzian Mortality to an Index of Aging-Relatedness addresses the surprisingly subtlenotion—with consequential biomedical and public health relevance—of what it means for acondition to be related to aging. In this pursuit, the book presents a new quantitative methodto examine the relative contributions of genetic and environmental factors to mortality anddisease incidence in a population.
With input from evolutionary biology, population genetics, demography, and epidemiology, this medically motivated book describes an index of aging-relatedness and also features:
Original results on the asymptotic behavior of the minimum of time-to-event random variables, which extends those of the classical statistical theory of extreme values
A comprehensive and satisfactory explanation based on biological principles of the Gompertz pattern of mortality in human populations
The development of an evolution-based model of causation relevant to mortality and aging-related diseases of complex etiology
An explanation of how and why the description of human mortality by the Gompertz distribution can be improved upon from first principles
The amply illustrated analysis of real-world data, including a program for conducting the analysis written in the freely available R statistical software
Technical appendices including mathematical material as well as an extensive and multidisciplinary bibliography on aging and aging-related diseases
The Biostatistics of Aging: From Gompertzian Mortality to an Index of Aging-Relatedness is an excellent resource for practitioners and researchers with an interest in aging and aging-related diseases from the fields of medicine, biology, gerontology, biostatistics, epidemiology, demography, and public health.