A new absolute continuous bivariate generalized exponential distribution
From MaRDI portal
Publication:419354
DOI10.1016/j.jspi.2012.01.015zbMath1237.62064OpenAlexW1969206733MaRDI QIDQ419354
Shirin Shoaee, Esmaile Khorram
Publication date: 18 May 2012
Published in: Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jspi.2012.01.015
EM algorithmmaximum likelihood estimationconditional probability density functionjoint probability density functionpseudo-likelihood function
Multivariate distribution of statistics (62H10) Point estimation (62F10) Characterization and structure theory for multivariate probability distributions; copulas (62H05) Characterization and structure theory of statistical distributions (62E10)
Related Items
Exchangeable exogenous shock models ⋮ Absolute continuous multivariate generalized exponential distribution ⋮ On a new absolutely continuous bivariate generalized exponential distribution ⋮ Extended Marshall–Olkin Model and Its Dual Version
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- A class of absolutely continuous bivariate distributions
- A new class of bivariate distributions and its mixture
- Bivariate generalized exponential distribution
- Some results on the proportional reversed hazards model
- Proportional reversed hazard rate model and its applications
- Test of fit for Marshall-Olkin distributions with applications
- SOME RESULTS ON REVERSED HAZARD RATE
- How to Identify a Bathtub Hazard Rate
- On Bivariate Reversed Hazard Rates
- A Continuous Bivariate Exponential Extension
- Generalized exponential distributions
- Modeling failure time data by lehman alternatives
- SOME RESULTS ON REVERSED HAZARD RATE ORDERING
- A CHARACTERIZATION OF MODEL APPROACH FOR GENERATING BIVARIATE LIFE DISTRIBUTIONS USING REVERSED HAZARD RATES
- The Reversed Hazard Rate Function
- Some Characterization Results Based on Factorization of the (Reversed) Hazard Rate Function
- Some Concepts of Dependence
- A Multivariate Definition for Increasing Hazard Rate Distribution Functions
- The Power of Rank Tests