A dynamic bivariate common shock model with cumulative effect and its actuarial application
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4562053
DOI10.1080/03461238.2018.1470562zbMath1418.91247OpenAlexW2802504359MaRDI QIDQ4562053
Publication date: 14 December 2018
Published in: Scandinavian Actuarial Journal (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/03461238.2018.1470562
Applications of statistics to actuarial sciences and financial mathematics (62P05) Reliability and life testing (62N05)
Related Items
A general shock model for modelling coupled lives and its application to life insurance, JOINT LIFE INSURANCE PRICING USING EXTENDED MARSHALL–OLKIN MODELS, A general multivariate new better than used (MNBU) distribution and its properties, Optimal consumption-investment and life-insurance purchase strategy for couples with correlated lifetimes
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Love and death: a Freund model with frailty
- An introduction to copulas.
- Stochastic orders
- Construction of two new general classes of bivariate distributions based on stochastic orders
- Modelling stochastic mortality for dependent lives
- Analysis of multivariate survival data
- Stochastic modeling for reliability. Shocks, burn-in and heterogeneous populations
- Lifetime dependence modelling using a truncated multivariate gamma distribution
- On construction of general classes of bivariate distributions
- A note on multiple life premiums for dependent lifetimes
- Bivariate Survival Models for Coupled Lives
- Technical Note—A Note on Shot-Noise and Reliability Modeling
- On failure modeling
- On generalized shot noise
- Stochastic Models in Reliability
- A general minimal repair model
- BROKEN-HEART, COMMON LIFE, HETEROGENEITY: ANALYZING THE SPOUSAL MORTALITY DEPENDENCE
- Limiting properties of Poisson shot noise processes
- On New Classes of Extreme Shock Models and Some Generalizations
- Study of a Stochastic Failure Model in a Random Environment
- Some Concepts of Dependence
- A Multivariate Exponential Distribution
- Dependence and Aging Aspects of Multivariate Survival