surveillance (Q58333)

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Temporal and Spatio-Temporal Modeling and Monitoring of Epidemic Phenomena
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English
surveillance
Temporal and Spatio-Temporal Modeling and Monitoring of Epidemic Phenomena

    Statements

    1.21.0
    15 March 2023
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    1.21.1
    19 May 2023
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    0.9-1
    21 November 2005
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    0.9-2
    5 September 2006
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    0.9-6
    25 June 2007
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    0.9-7
    18 November 2007
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    0.9-8
    19 January 2008
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    0.9-9
    21 January 2008
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    0.9
    18 November 2005
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    1.0-2
    6 March 2009
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    1.1-2
    15 October 2009
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    1.1-6
    25 May 2010
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    1.2-1
    15 January 2012
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    1.4-1
    26 July 2012
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    1.4-2
    20 August 2012
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    1.5-0
    12 December 2012
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    1.5-1
    14 December 2012
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    1.5-2
    19 March 2013
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    1.5-4
    21 April 2013
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    1.6-0
    9 September 2013
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    1.7-0
    19 November 2013
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    1.8-0
    17 June 2014
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    1.8-1
    30 October 2014
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    1.8-2
    20 December 2014
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    1.8-3
    6 January 2015
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    1.9-0
    11 June 2015
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    1.9-1
    12 June 2015
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    1.10-0
    6 November 2015
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    1.11.0
    9 February 2016
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    1.12.0
    3 April 2016
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    1.12.1
    18 May 2016
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    1.12.2
    17 November 2016
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    1.13.0
    20 December 2016
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    1.13.1
    29 April 2017
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    1.14.0
    30 June 2017
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    1.15.0
    6 October 2017
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    1.16.0
    23 January 2018
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    1.16.1
    29 May 2018
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    1.16.2
    25 July 2018
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    1.17.0
    22 February 2019
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    1.17.1
    13 September 2019
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    1.17.2
    12 November 2019
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    1.17.3
    16 December 2019
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    1.18.0
    19 March 2020
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    1.19.0
    30 January 2021
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    1.19.1
    31 March 2021
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    1.20.0
    16 February 2022
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    1.20.1
    19 July 2022
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    1.20.3
    16 November 2022
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    1.22.0
    30 October 2023
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    1.22.1
    28 November 2023
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    28 November 2023
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    Statistical methods for the modeling and monitoring of time series of counts, proportions and categorical data, as well as for the modeling of continuous-time point processes of epidemic phenomena. The monitoring methods focus on aberration detection in count data time series from public health surveillance of communicable diseases, but applications could just as well originate from environmetrics, reliability engineering, econometrics, or social sciences. The package implements many typical outbreak detection procedures such as the (improved) Farrington algorithm, or the negative binomial GLR-CUSUM method of Hoehle and Paul (2008) <doi:10.1016/j.csda.2008.02.015>. A novel CUSUM approach combining logistic and multinomial logistic modeling is also included. The package contains several real-world data sets, the ability to simulate outbreak data, and to visualize the results of the monitoring in a temporal, spatial or spatio-temporal fashion. A recent overview of the available monitoring procedures is given by Salmon et al. (2016) <doi:10.18637/jss.v070.i10>. For the retrospective analysis of epidemic spread, the package provides three endemic-epidemic modeling frameworks with tools for visualization, likelihood inference, and simulation. hhh4() estimates models for (multivariate) count time series following Paul and Held (2011) <doi:10.1002/sim.4177> and Meyer and Held (2014) <doi:10.1214/14-AOAS743>. twinSIR() models the susceptible-infectious-recovered (SIR) event history of a fixed population, e.g, epidemics across farms or networks, as a multivariate point process as proposed by Hoehle (2009) <doi:10.1002/bimj.200900050>. twinstim() estimates self-exciting point process models for a spatio-temporal point pattern of infective events, e.g., time-stamped geo-referenced surveillance data, as proposed by Meyer et al. (2012) <doi:10.1111/j.1541-0420.2011.01684.x>. A recent overview of the implemented space-time modeling frameworks for epidemic phenomena is given by Meyer et al. (2017) <doi:10.18637/jss.v077.i11>.
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