ABSTRACT

Cyrille Joutard Institut de Mathe´matiques et de Mode´lisation de Montpellier & Universite´ Montpellier 3, Montpellier Cedex 5, France

Evaluation of sensitivity and specificity of diagnostic tests in the absence of a gold standard typically relies on latent structure models. For example, two extensions of latent class models in the biostatistics literature, Gaussian random effects (Qu et al., 1996) and finite mixture (Albert and Dodd, 2004), form the basis of several recent approaches to estimating sensitivity and specificity of diagnostic tests when no (or partial) gold standard evaluation is available. These models attempt to account for additional item dependencies that cannot be explained with traditional latent class models, where the classes typically correspond to healthy and diseased individuals.