Connection

Leslie Lenert to Reproducibility of Results

This is a "connection" page, showing publications Leslie Lenert has written about Reproducibility of Results.
Connection Strength

0.276
  1. A web-compatible instrument for measuring self-reported disease activity in arthritis. J Rheumatol. 2004 Feb; 31(2):223-8.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.038
  2. Use of willingness to pay to study values for pharmacotherapies for migraine headache. Med Care. 2003 Feb; 41(2):299-308.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.035
  3. Validity and interpretation of preference-based measures of health-related quality of life. Med Care. 2000 Sep; 38(9 Suppl):II138-50.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.030
  4. The reliability and internal consistency of an Internet-capable computer program for measuring utilities. Qual Life Res. 2000; 9(7):811-7.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.028
  5. Empirically defined health states for depression from the SF-12. Health Serv Res. 1998 Oct; 33(4 Pt 1):911-28.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.026
  6. The effect of search procedures on utility elicitations. Med Decis Making. 1998 Jan-Mar; 18(1):76-83.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.025
  7. Measurement of the validity of utility elicitations performed by computerized interview. Med Care. 1997 Sep; 35(9):915-20.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.024
  8. The effect of assessment method and respondent population on utilities elicited for Gaucher disease. Qual Life Res. 1997 Mar; 6(2):169-84.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.023
  9. Willingness-to-pay utility assessment: feasibility of use in normative patient decision support systems. Proc AMIA Annu Fall Symp. 1997; 223-7.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.023
  10. IMPACT: an object-oriented graphical environment for construction of multimedia patient interviewing software. Proc Annu Symp Comput Appl Med Care. 1995; 319-23.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.020
  11. The side effects of antipsychotic drugs and patients' quality of life: patient education and preference assessment with computers and multimedia. Proc Annu Symp Comput Appl Med Care. 1993; 17-21.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.004
Connection Strength

The connection strength for concepts is the sum of the scores for each matching publication.

Publication scores are based on many factors, including how long ago they were written and whether the person is a first or senior author.