Siler Mortality Model
The Siler model is a parametric description of the entire age pattern of mortality, from birth to extreme old age, built as the sum of three competing hazards: a high but rapidly declining risk in early life, a roughly constant background risk through the prime adult years, and an exponentially rising risk of senescence. With just five parameters it reproduces the characteristic U-shaped (or bathtub) mortality curve seen across humans and many animal species. Introduced by William Siler in 1979 for animal mortality, it has become a standard tool in paleodemography, anthropological demography, and comparative life-history studies where a smooth full-lifespan mortality law is needed.
Přečíst celou metodu
Pro přečtení této sekce se přihlaste s bezplatným účtem.
Mapa metod
Okolí příbuzných metod — vyberte uzel, který chcete prozkoumat.
Zdroje
- Siler, W. (1979). A competing-risk model for animal mortality. Ecology, 60(4), 750–757. DOI: 10.2307/1936612 ↗
- Gage, T. B., & Dyke, B. (1986). Parameterizing abridged mortality tables: the Siler three-component hazard model. Human Biology, 58(2), 275–291. link ↗
Jak citovat tuto stránku
ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Siler Competing-Hazard Mortality Model. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/cs/demography/siler-mortality-model
Která metoda?
Postavte tuto metodu vedle jejích nejbližších příbuzných a čtěte je vedle sebe — knihovna položí knihy na stůl; volba je na vás.
- Gompertz-Makeham Law of MortalityDemografie↔ porovnat
- Heligman-Pollard ModelDemografie↔ porovnat
- Model Lee-CarterDemografie↔ porovnat
- Analýza životních tabulekDemografie↔ porovnat
Podobné metody
Našli jste na této stránce chybu? Nahlaste ji nebo navrhněte opravu →