關閉式搜尋視窗的按鈕
關閉式搜尋視窗的按鈕
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Professor I-Feng Lin

Mail : iflin@nycu.edu.tw

Tel : 02-2826-7000#67311

CV
Education

Doctor of Public Health in Biostatistics, Columbia university
Master of Science in Biostatistics, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Experience

Associate professor, National Yang-Ming University, Taiwan
Assistant professor, National Yang-Ming University, Taiwan
Lecturer, Department of social medicine, National Yang-Ming University

Professional Specialty
Biostatistics, Quantitative analysis in public health research
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Selected Publication
  1. Hsieh WA#, Lin IF#, Ho JH, Chang PW. 30 years follow-up and increased risks of breast cancer and leukaemia after long-term low dose-rate radiation exposure. British J Cancer 2017 Dec 5; 117(12):1883-1887(#Equal contribution)
  2. Wang MC, Lin IF*. Managing nonignorable missing data with clustered multinomial Responses. Statistical Modelling. 2015;15(6):548-563 (*Corresponding author)
  3. Lin IF*,Chang WP, Liao YN. Shrinkage Methods Enhanced the Accuracy of Parameter Estimation Using Cox models with Small Number of Events. J Clinical Epidemiology 2013; Jul;66(7):743-51 (*Corresponding author)
  4. Yen PN, Yang CC, Chang WP, Wang JD, Hwang JS, Chang TC, Kuo KL, Lin IF*. Late effects on the health-related quality of life in a cohort population decades after environmental radiation exposure. International Journal of Radiation Biology 2013; Aug;89(8):639-44 (*Corresponding author)
  5. Chuang PH, Chuang JH, Lin IF*. A Dynamic Estimation of the Daily Cumulative Cases during Infectious Disease Surveillance: Application to Dengue Fever. BMC Infectious diseases 2010;10:136 (*Corresponding author)
Selected Advisee Thesis
  1. A Dynamic Estimation of the Daily Cases during Infectious Disease Surveillance
  2. Comparisons of the Cancer Risk Estimates between Excess Relative Risk and Relative Risk Models:A Case Study
  3. Event Per Variable in Cox Proportional Hazard Model
  4. Managing Nonignorable Missing Data with Clustered Multinomial Responses
  5. Modeling the Ageing Effect on Changes of Health Index: a Case Study