Discrimination between lifetime distributions with ratios of maximized likelihoods

Major problem that often arises in the analysis of lifetime data is how to select the distribution that fits our data better among numerous models that apparently fit the data. The study investigates the procedure of ratio of the maximized likelihoods to discriminate between Weibull, Log-logistic an...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Simeon, Amusan Ajitoni, Mohd. Khalid, Zarina, Ahmad, Rashidah, Yusof, Fadhilah
Format: Article
Published: Medwell Journals 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/60201/
https://medwelljournals.com/abstract/?doi=rjasci.2015.287.293
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
id my.utm.60201
record_format eprints
spelling my.utm.602012021-12-15T08:51:50Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/60201/ Discrimination between lifetime distributions with ratios of maximized likelihoods Simeon, Amusan Ajitoni Mohd. Khalid, Zarina Ahmad, Rashidah Yusof, Fadhilah QA Mathematics Major problem that often arises in the analysis of lifetime data is how to select the distribution that fits our data better among numerous models that apparently fit the data. The study investigates the procedure of ratio of the maximized likelihoods to discriminate between Weibull, Log-logistic and inverse Gaussian distributions and applies it to fit data on time-to-first-birth after marriage in Nigeria. We discriminate between two distributions at a time starting with Weibull and Log-logistic, then Weibull and inverse Gaussian and finally Log-logistic and inverse Gaussian. Ratios of maximized likelihoods computed for each of these combinations of distributions are all negative when the data set was analyzed. The study concludes by identifying inverse Gaussian distribution as the most suitable distribution to model data on time-to-first-birth in Nigeria having shown preference over Log-logistic which had initially been found to be more suitable than Weibull. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov (K-S) distance between the empirical cumulative distribution function (ecdf) and cumulative distribution function (cdf) of inverse Gaussian is 0.0873, the shortest of all the distributions investigated, points to inverse Gaussian as the most preferred distribution for the data. Medwell Journals 2015 Article PeerReviewed Simeon, Amusan Ajitoni and Mohd. Khalid, Zarina and Ahmad, Rashidah and Yusof, Fadhilah (2015) Discrimination between lifetime distributions with ratios of maximized likelihoods. Research Journal Of Applied Sciences, 10 (7). pp. 287-295. ISSN 1815-932X https://medwelljournals.com/abstract/?doi=rjasci.2015.287.293
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic QA Mathematics
spellingShingle QA Mathematics
Simeon, Amusan Ajitoni
Mohd. Khalid, Zarina
Ahmad, Rashidah
Yusof, Fadhilah
Discrimination between lifetime distributions with ratios of maximized likelihoods
description Major problem that often arises in the analysis of lifetime data is how to select the distribution that fits our data better among numerous models that apparently fit the data. The study investigates the procedure of ratio of the maximized likelihoods to discriminate between Weibull, Log-logistic and inverse Gaussian distributions and applies it to fit data on time-to-first-birth after marriage in Nigeria. We discriminate between two distributions at a time starting with Weibull and Log-logistic, then Weibull and inverse Gaussian and finally Log-logistic and inverse Gaussian. Ratios of maximized likelihoods computed for each of these combinations of distributions are all negative when the data set was analyzed. The study concludes by identifying inverse Gaussian distribution as the most suitable distribution to model data on time-to-first-birth in Nigeria having shown preference over Log-logistic which had initially been found to be more suitable than Weibull. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov (K-S) distance between the empirical cumulative distribution function (ecdf) and cumulative distribution function (cdf) of inverse Gaussian is 0.0873, the shortest of all the distributions investigated, points to inverse Gaussian as the most preferred distribution for the data.
format Article
author Simeon, Amusan Ajitoni
Mohd. Khalid, Zarina
Ahmad, Rashidah
Yusof, Fadhilah
author_facet Simeon, Amusan Ajitoni
Mohd. Khalid, Zarina
Ahmad, Rashidah
Yusof, Fadhilah
author_sort Simeon, Amusan Ajitoni
title Discrimination between lifetime distributions with ratios of maximized likelihoods
title_short Discrimination between lifetime distributions with ratios of maximized likelihoods
title_full Discrimination between lifetime distributions with ratios of maximized likelihoods
title_fullStr Discrimination between lifetime distributions with ratios of maximized likelihoods
title_full_unstemmed Discrimination between lifetime distributions with ratios of maximized likelihoods
title_sort discrimination between lifetime distributions with ratios of maximized likelihoods
publisher Medwell Journals
publishDate 2015
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/60201/
https://medwelljournals.com/abstract/?doi=rjasci.2015.287.293
_version_ 1720436918323249152