Approximating Quasistationary Distributions of Birth–Death Processes
Publication:4903041
DOI10.1239/jap/1354716656zbMath1275.60061OpenAlexW1981612822MaRDI QIDQ4903041
Publication date: 19 January 2013
Published in: Journal of Applied Probability (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://projecteuclid.org/euclid.jap/1354716656
moment closurepopulation dynamicslimiting conditional distributionbirth-death processSIS epidemic modellogistic population growthcumulant closure
Epidemiology (92D30) Population dynamics (general) (92D25) Branching processes (Galton-Watson, birth-and-death, etc.) (60J80) Applications of continuous-time Markov processes on discrete state spaces (60J28)
Related Items (3)
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Extinction and quasi-stationarity in the stochastic logistic SIS model.
- Approximating the quasi-stationary distribution of the SIS model for endemic infection
- Convergence of quasi-stationary distributions in birth-death processes
- Mixed Poisson approximation in the collective epidemic model
- Existence of quasi-stationary distributions: A renewal dynamical approach
- Poisson approximation for the final state of a generalized epidemic process
- An extension of the moment closure method
- On the asymptotic behavior of the stochastic and deterministic models of an epidemic
- Total Variation Approximation for Quasi-Stationary Distributions
- On the distribution of the time to extinction in the stochastic logistic population model
- Poisson approximation for some epidemic models
- Diffusion approximations for some simple chemical reaction schemes
- On the Extinction of theS–I–Sstochastic logistic epidemic
- On Approximating the Moments of the Equilibrium Distribution of a Stochastic Logistic Model
- A note on quasi-stationary distributions of birth–death processes and the SIS logistic epidemic
- The quasistationary distribution of the stochastic logistic model
- On quasi-stationary distributions in absorbing continuous-time finite Markov chains
This page was built for publication: Approximating Quasistationary Distributions of Birth–Death Processes