Modifying Survival Models To Accommodate Thresholding Behavior
Methodology
2024-03-04 v2
Abstract
Survival models capture the relationship between an accumulating hazard and the occurrence of a singular event stimulated by that accumulation. When the model for the hazard is sufficiently flexible survival models can accommodate a wide range of behaviors. If the hazard model is less flexible, for example when it is constrained by an external physical process, then the resulting survival model can be much too rigid. In this paper I introduce a modified survival model that generalizes the relationship between accumulating hazard and event occurrence with particular emphasis on capturing thresholding behavior. Finally I demonstrate the utility of this approach on a physiological application.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2212.07602,
title = {Modifying Survival Models To Accommodate Thresholding Behavior},
author = {Michael Betancourt},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2212.07602},
year = {2024}
}
Comments
28 pages, 9 figures