| Literature DB >> 21259310 |
Matthew L Robb1, Dankmar Böhning.
Abstract
Capture–recapture techniques have been used for considerable time to predict population size. Estimators usually rely on frequency counts for numbers of trappings; however, it may be the case that these are not available for a particular problem, for example if the original data set has been lost and only a summary table is available. Here, we investigate techniques for specific examples; the motivating example is an epidemiology study by Mosley et al., which focussed on a cholera outbreak in East Pakistan. To demonstrate the wider range of the technique, we also look at a study for predicting the long-term outlook of the AIDS epidemic using information on number of sexual partners. A new estimator is developed here which uses the EM algorithm to impute unobserved values and then uses these values in a similar way to the existing estimators. The results show that a truncated approach – mimicking the Chao lower bound approach – gives an improved estimate when population homogeneity is violated.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21259310 DOI: 10.1002/bimj.201000004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biom J ISSN: 0323-3847 Impact factor: 2.207