Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1151287 Statistical Methodology 2007 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

T. Cacoullos and H. Papageorgiou [On some bivariate probability models applicable to traffic accidents and fatalities, Int. Stat. Rev. 48 (1980) 345–356] studied a special class of bivariate discrete distributions appropriate for modeling traffic accidents, and fatalities resulting therefrom. The corresponding random variable may be written as Z=(N,Y)′, with Y=∑j=1NXj, where {Xj}j=1N, are independent copies of a (discrete) random variable XX, and NN is independent of {Xj}j=1N, and follows a Poisson law. If XX follows a Poisson law (resp. Binomial law), the resulting distribution is termed Poisson–Poisson (resp. Poisson–Binomial). L2-type goodness-of-fit statistics are constructed for the ‘general distribution’ of this kind, where XX may be an arbitrary discrete nonnegative random variable. The test statistics utilize a simple characterization involving the corresponding probability generating function, and are shown to be consistent. The proposed procedures are shown to perform satisfactorily in simulated data, while their application to accident data leads to positive conclusions regarding the modeling ability of this class of bivariate distributions.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Statistics and Probability
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