Summary statistics for contingency tables | Bayesian statistics

Odds ratio

An odds ratio (OR) is a statistic that quantifies the strength of the association between two events, A and B. The odds ratio is defined as the ratio of the odds of A in the presence of B and the odds of A in the absence of B, or equivalently (due to ), the ratio of the odds of B in the presence of A and the odds of B in the absence of A. Two events are independent if and only if the OR equals 1, i.e., the odds of one event are the same in either the presence or absence of the other event. If the OR is greater than 1, then A and B are associated (correlated) in the sense that, compared to the absence of B, the presence of B raises the odds of A, and symmetrically the presence of A raises the odds of B. Conversely, if the OR is less than 1, then A and B are negatively correlated, and the presence of one event reduces the odds of the other event. Note that the odds ratio is symmetric in the two events, and there is no causal direction implied (correlation does not imply causation): an OR greater than 1 does not establish that B causes A, or that A causes B. Two similar statistics that are often used to quantify associations are the relative risk (RR) and the absolute risk reduction (ARR). Often, the parameter of greatest interest is actually the RR, which is the ratio of the probabilities analogous to the odds used in the OR. However, available data frequently do not allow for the computation of the RR or the ARR but do allow for the computation of the OR, as in case-control studies, as explained below. On the other hand, if one of the properties (A or B) is sufficiently rare (in epidemiology this is called the rare disease assumption), then the OR is approximately equal to the corresponding RR. The OR in the logistic model. (Wikipedia).

Odds ratio
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Related pages

Logistic regression | P-value | Correlation does not imply causation | Contingency table | Symmetry | Probability | Rare disease assumption | Independence (probability theory) | Confidence interval | Forest plot | Binary data | Fisher's exact test | Variance | Hazard ratio | Diagnostic odds ratio | Joint probability distribution | Odds | Likelihood ratio | Effect size | Probability distribution | Normal distribution | Rate ratio | Random variable | Yule's Q | Natural logarithm | Prevalence | Relative risk | Cochran–Mantel–Haenszel statistics | Clinical trial | Statistic | Logit | Cohen's h | Cross-ratio