A Comparison of Two Sequential Metropolis-Hastings Algorithms with Standard Simulation Techniques in Bayesian Inference in Reliability Models Involving a Generalized Gamma Distribution
Jørund Gåsemyr (),
Bent Natvig () and
Erik Sørensen ()
Additional contact information
Jørund Gåsemyr: University of Oslo
Bent Natvig: University of Oslo and Norwegian Computing Center
Erik Sørensen: MYND
Methodology and Computing in Applied Probability, 2001, vol. 3, issue 1, 51-73
Abstract:
Abstract In this paper we consider the generalized gamma distribution as introduced in Gåsemyr and Natvig (1998). This distribution enters naturally in Bayesian inference in exponential survival models with left censoring. In the paper mentioned above it is shown that the weighted sum of products of generalized gamma distributions is a conjugate prior for the parameters of component lifetimes, having autopsy data in a Marshall-Olkin shock model. A corresponding result is shown in Gåsemyr and Natvig (1999) for independent, exponentially distributed component lifetimes in a model with partial monitoring of components with applications to preventive system maintenance. A discussion in the present paper strongly indicates that expressing the posterior distribution in terms of the generalized gamma distribution is computationally efficient compared to using the ordinary gamma distribution in such models. Furthermore, we present two types of sequential Metropolis-Hastings algorithms that may be used in Bayesian inference in situations where exact methods are intractable. Finally these types of algorithms are compared with standard simulation techniques and analytical results in arriving at the posterior distribution of the parameters of component lifetimes in special cases of the mentioned models. It seems that one of these types of algorithms may be very favorable when prior assessments are updated by several data sets and when there are significant discrepancies between the prior assessments and the data.
Keywords: exponential survival models; left censoring; autopsy data; Marshall-Olkin shock model; preventive system maintenance; adaptive MCMC (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2001
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DOI: 10.1023/A:1011466124426
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