AI Article Synopsis

  • Count data is common in risk analysis, like tracking deaths and accidents, and analysts aim to estimate the probability distribution of these events.
  • Traditional count data regression models have limitations due to their fixed variance structure.
  • The Conway-Maxwell Poisson (COM-Poisson) model offers a more flexible alternative and this study evaluates its statistical performance, finding it accurately models various types of data and provides reliable parameter estimates.

Article Abstract

Count data are pervasive in many areas of risk analysis; deaths, adverse health outcomes, infrastructure system failures, and traffic accidents are all recorded as count events, for example. Risk analysts often wish to estimate the probability distribution for the number of discrete events as part of doing a risk assessment. Traditional count data regression models of the type often used in risk assessment for this problem suffer from limitations due to the assumed variance structure. A more flexible model based on the Conway-Maxwell Poisson (COM-Poisson) distribution was recently proposed, a model that has the potential to overcome the limitations of the traditional model. However, the statistical performance of this new model has not yet been fully characterized. This article assesses the performance of a maximum likelihood estimation method for fitting the COM-Poisson generalized linear model (GLM). The objectives of this article are to (1) characterize the parameter estimation accuracy of the MLE implementation of the COM-Poisson GLM, and (2) estimate the prediction accuracy of the COM-Poisson GLM using simulated data sets. The results of the study indicate that the COM-Poisson GLM is flexible enough to model under-, equi-, and overdispersed data sets with different sample mean values. The results also show that the COM-Poisson GLM yields accurate parameter estimates. The COM-Poisson GLM provides a promising and flexible approach for performing count data regression.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1539-6924.2011.01659.xDOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Count data is common in risk analysis, like tracking deaths and accidents, and analysts aim to estimate the probability distribution of these events.
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  • The Conway-Maxwell Poisson (COM-Poisson) model offers a more flexible alternative and this study evaluates its statistical performance, finding it accurately models various types of data and provides reliable parameter estimates.
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