This book makes these complex methods more accessible to applied researchers without an advanced mathematical background. The use of counting process methodology has allowed for substantial advances in the statistical theory to account for censoring and truncation in survival experiments. The analysis of survival experiments is complicated by issues of censoring, where an individual's life length is known to occur only in a certain period of time, and by truncation, where individuals enter the study only if they survive a sufficient length of time or individuals are included in the study only if the event has occurred by a given date. While the statistical tools presented in this book are applicable to data from medicine, biology, public health, epidemiology, engineering, economics, and demography, the focus here is on applications of the techniques to biology and medicine. Applied statisticians in many fields must frequently analyze time to event data.