Authors
Richard D Gill, Soren Johansen
Publication date
1990/12
Journal
The annals of statistics
Volume
18
Issue
4
Pages
1501-1555
Publisher
Institute of Mathematical Statistics
Description
The correspondence between a survival function and its hazard or failure-rate is a central idea in survival analysis and in the theory of counting processes. This correspondence is shown to be a special case of a more general correspondence between multiplicative and additive matrix-valued measures on the real line. Additive integration of the survival function produces the hazard, while the multiplicative integral, or so-called product-integral, of the hazard yields the survival function. The easy generalization to the matrix case (noncommutative multiplication) allows an elegant and completely parallel treatment of intensity measures of Markov processes, with many possible applications in multistate survival models. However, the difficulties and multiplicity of theories of product-integration in multivariate time explain why so many different multivariate product-limit estimators exist. We give a complete and elementary …
Total citations
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