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An intuitive Bayesian spatial model for disease mapping that accounts for scaling
- Publication Year :
- 2016
- Publisher :
- arXiv, 2016.
-
Abstract
- In recent years, disease mapping studies have become a routine application within geographical epidemiology and are typically analysed within a Bayesian hierarchical model formulation. A variety of model formulations for the latent level have been proposed but all come with inherent issues. In the classical BYM model, the spatially structured component cannot be seen independently from the unstructured component. This makes prior definitions for the hyperparameters of the two random effects challenging. There are alternative model formulations that address this confounding, however, the issue on how to choose interpretable hyperpriors is still unsolved. Here, we discuss a recently proposed parameterisation of the BYM model that leads to improved parameter control as the hyperparameters can be seen independently from each other. Furthermore, the need for a scaled spatial component is addressed, which facilitates assignment of interpretable hyperpriors and make these transferable between spatial applications with different graph structures. We provide implementation details for the new model formulation which preserve sparsity properties, and we investigate systematically the model performance and compare it to existing parameterisations. Through a simulation study, we show that the new model performs well, both showing good learning abilities and good shrinkage behaviour. In terms of model choice criteria, the proposed model performs at least equally well as existing parameterisations, but only the new formulation offers parameters that are interpretable and hyperpriors that have a clear meaning.<br />Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, 5 tables
- Subjects :
- Statistics and Probability
FOS: Computer and information sciences
Epidemiology
Computer science
Bayesian probability
Normal Distribution
Machine learning
computer.software_genre
01 natural sciences
Interpretation (model theory)
Methodology (stat.ME)
010104 statistics & probability
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Health Information Management
Component (UML)
Prior probability
Bayesian hierarchical modeling
030212 general & internal medicine
0101 mathematics
Statistics - Methodology
Hyperparameter
business.industry
Bayes Theorem
Random effects model
Markov Chains
Epidemiological Monitoring
Graph (abstract data type)
Artificial intelligence
business
computer
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....965b8f454070b6e0016e6becf27ebe54
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1601.01180