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| Life Expectancy Decomposition× | Arriaga Decomposition× | |
|---|---|---|
| Alan≠ | Social Epidemiology | Demografi |
| Aile | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Köken yılı | 1984 | 1984 |
| Köken≠ | Eduardo E. Arriaga; John H. Pollard | Eduardo E. Arriaga |
| Tür≠ | Demographic decomposition pipeline for differences in a summary measure | Age-specific decomposition of a difference in life expectancy |
| Seminal kaynak≠ | Arriaga, E. E. (1984). Measuring and explaining the change in life expectancies. Demography, 21(1), 83-96. DOI ↗ | Arriaga, E. E. (1984). Measuring and explaining the change in life expectancies. Demography, 21(1), 83–96. DOI ↗ |
| Diğer adlar | Life Expectancy Decomposition Methods, Decomposition of Changes in Life Expectancy, Age and Cause Decomposition of Life Expectancy, Stepwise Life Expectancy Decomposition | Arriaga's method, Life-expectancy decomposition, Age decomposition of life expectancy, Arriaga Ayrıştırması |
| İlişkili | 4 | 4 |
| Özet≠ | Life-expectancy decomposition answers a question that a single number cannot: when life expectancy rises over time, or differs between two populations, exactly which ages and which causes of death are responsible? The family of methods takes two life tables and splits their gap in e0 (or ex at any age) into additive contributions from mortality differences in each age interval, with the contributions summing exactly to the total gap. Eduardo Arriaga's 1984 stepwise discrete method became the field standard because it is exact, intuitive, and easy to extend to a cause-of-death breakdown, separating a 'direct' effect of changed survival within an interval from an 'indirect plus interaction' effect that the change propagates to later ages. John Pollard's continuous formulation expresses the same decomposition as an integral of age-specific mortality differences weighted by their leverage on life expectancy, providing the theoretical underpinning and a cross-check. This page treats the general decomposition pipeline; the dedicated Arriaga and Pollard pages cover each estimator in depth. | 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. |
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