Modeling wildfire ignition origins in southern California using linear network point processes
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2179971
DOI10.1214/19-AOAS1309zbMath1439.62237WikidataQ117555922 ScholiaQ117555922MaRDI QIDQ2179971
Medha Uppala, Mark S. Handcock
Publication date: 13 May 2020
Published in: The Annals of Applied Statistics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://projecteuclid.org/euclid.aoas/1587002677
point processesroad networkspseudolikelihoodwildfiresspatiotemporal modelinglinear networkBerman-Turner methodignition originsspider webs
Directional data; spatial statistics (62H11) Applications of statistics to environmental and related topics (62P12) Point processes (e.g., Poisson, Cox, Hawkes processes) (60G55)
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Point process modeling of wildfire hazard in Los Angeles county, California
- Resampling a coverage pattern
- The jackknife and the bootstrap for general stationary observations
- Spatial Analysis along Networks
- Geometrically Corrected Second Order Analysis of Events on a Linear Network, with Applications to Ecology and Criminology
- Practical Maximum Pseudolikelihood for Spatial Point Patterns
- Approximating Point Process Likelihoods with GLIM
- Residual Analysis for Spatial Point Processes (with Discussion)
- The conditional intensity of general point processes and an application to line processes
- A Separable Model for Dynamic Networks