Vertaile menetelmiä
Tarkastele valitsemiasi menetelmiä rinnakkain; eroavat rivit korostetaan.
| Pollard Decomposition× | Arriaga Decomposition× | |
|---|---|---|
| Tieteenala | Väestötiede | Väestötiede |
| Menetelmäperhe | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Syntyvuosi≠ | 1982 | 1984 |
| Kehittäjä≠ | John H. Pollard | Eduardo E. Arriaga |
| Tyyppi | Age-specific decomposition of a difference in life expectancy | Age-specific decomposition of a difference in life expectancy |
| Alkuperäislähde≠ | Pollard, J. H. (1982). The expectation of life and its relationship to mortality. Journal of the Institute of Actuaries, 109(2), 225–240. DOI ↗ | Arriaga, E. E. (1984). Measuring and explaining the change in life expectancies. Demography, 21(1), 83–96. DOI ↗ |
| Rinnakkaisnimet≠ | Pollard's Method, Pollard Life Expectancy Decomposition, Continuous Age Decomposition of Life Expectancy | Arriaga's method, Life-expectancy decomposition, Age decomposition of life expectancy, Arriaga Ayrıştırması |
| Liittyvät | 4 | 4 |
| Tiivistelmä≠ | Pollard's decomposition breaks a difference in life expectancy between two populations into additive contributions from each age, showing exactly how much of the gap is due to mortality differences at infancy, in midlife, or in old age. John Pollard derived a continuous-age formula expressing the life-expectancy difference as an integral of the age-specific mortality-rate difference weighted by life-table functions. Because the contributions sum exactly to the total gap and can be further split by cause of death, the method is a standard tool for explaining why one population outlives another. | Arriaga decomposition is a demographic technique that breaks down the difference in life expectancy between two life tables — two countries, two time points, or two groups — into the contributions of mortality change at each age. Introduced by Eduardo Arriaga in 1984, it tells the analyst not just that life expectancy rose or fell, but exactly which ages drove the change, separating the direct effect of mortality change within an age interval from the indirect effect of the extra survivors that change passes on to older ages. |
| ScholarGateAineisto ↗ |
|
|