Abstract
Mortality models often have inbuilt identification issues challenging the statistician. The statistician can choose to work with well-defined freely varying parameters, derived as maximal invariants in this paper, or with ad hoc identified parameters which at first glance seem more intuitive, but which can introduce a number of unnecessary challenges. In this paper we describe the methodological advantages from using the maximal invariant parameterisation and we go through the extra methodological challenges a statistician has to deal with when insisting on working with ad hoc identifications. These challenges are broadly similar in frequentist and in Bayesian setups. We also go through a number of examples from the literature where ad hoc identifications have been preferred in the statistical analyses. © 2014 Bent Nielsen and Jens P. Nielsen.
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CITATION STYLE
Nielsen, B., & Nielsen, J. P. (2014). Identification and forecasting in mortality models. Scientific World Journal, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/347043
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