Abstract

Monotonically increasing or decreasing functions are often used to model the relationship between the response of an experimental unit and the dose of a given substance. Of late, there has been an increased interest in dose-response relationships that exhibit hormetic effects. These effects may be characterized by an increase in response at low doses instead of the expected decrease in response that is observed at higher doses. Herein, we study the statistical implications of hormesis in several ways. First, we present a broad class of parametric mathematical-statistical models, constructed from standard dose-response models, that allow the incorporation of hormetic effects in such a way that the presence of hormesis can be tested statistically. Second, we consider the impact of model misspecification on effective dose estimation, such as the ED50 and the limiting dose for stimulation, when the hormetic effect is present but ignored in the dose-response model by the researcher (model underspecification) and when an hormetic effect is not present but incorporated into the dose-response model (model overspecification). Our simulation study reveals that it is more damaging to the estimation of effective dose to ignore the hormetic effect through model underspecification than to include the hormetic effect in the model through model overspecification. Third, we develop a nonpara-metric regression technique useful as an exploratory procedure to indicate hormetic effects when present. Finally, both parametric and nonparametric methods are illustrated with an example.

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