Identifying the effects of observed and unobserved risk factors using weighted Lindley shared regression model
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2136036
DOI10.1007/s42519-021-00241-9OpenAlexW4212848462MaRDI QIDQ2136036
Christophe Chesneau, Shikhar Tyagi, Arvind Pandey
Publication date: 10 May 2022
Published in: Journal of Statistical Theory and Practice (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s42519-021-00241-9
Markov chain Monte Carloleft censoringBayesian estimationreversed hazard ratemodified inverse Weibull distributionweighted Lindley frailtygeneralized inverse Rayleigh distribution
Parametric inference (62Fxx) Survival analysis and censored data (62Nxx) Applications of statistics (62Pxx)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- A two-parameter weighted Lindley distribution and its applications to survival data
- Stochastic orders
- Analysis of multivariate survival data
- Bayesian analysis of Weibull distribution based on progressive type-II censored competing risks data with binomial removals
- On proportional reversed hazards frailty models
- Weighted Lindley multiplicative regression frailty models under random censored data
- Gamma shared frailty model based on reversed hazard rate for bivariate survival data
- PARAMETERS ESTIMATION OF THE GENERALIZED INVERTED RAYLEIGH DISTRIBUTION BASED ON PROGRESSIVE TYPE II CENSORING
- Shared frailty models based on reversed hazard rate for modified inverse Weibull distribution as baseline distribution
- Bivariate Survival Models Induced by Frailties
- Modelling heterogeneity in survival data
- A model for association in bivariate life tables and its application in epidemiological studies of familial tendency in chronic disease incidence
- Point estimation under asymmetric loss functions for left-truncated exponential samples
- The Reversed Hazard Rate Function
- Modeling Survival Data Using Frailty Models
- Gamma frailty models for bivariate survival data
- Shared gamma frailty models based on reversed hazard rate for modeling Australian twin data
- Bayesian survival analysis