Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1146701 | Journal of Multivariate Analysis | 2007 | 14 Pages |
Characterizations of probability distributions is a topic of great popularity in applied probability and reliability literature for over last 30 years. Beside the intrinsic mathematical interest (often related to functional equations) the results in this area are helpful for probabilistic and statistical modelling, especially in engineering and biostatistical problems. A substantial number of characterizations has been devoted to a legion of variants of exponential distributions. The main reliability measures associated with a random vector X are the conditional moment function defined by mφ(x)=E(φ(X)|X⩾x) (which is equivalent to the mean residual life function e(x)=mφ(x)-x when φ(x)=x) and the hazard gradient function h(x)=-∇logR(x), where R(x) is the reliability (survival) function, R(x)=Pr(X⩾x), and ∇ is the operator . In this paper we study the consequences of a linear relationship between the hazard gradient and the conditional moment functions for continuous bivariate and multivariate distributions. We obtain a general characterization result which is the applied to characterize Arnold and Strauss’ bivariate exponential distribution and some related models.