This study highlights how the mortality plateau in Barbi and colleagues can be generated by low-frequency, randomly distributed age-misreporting errors. Furthermore, sensitivity of the late-life mortality plateau in Barbi and colleagues to the particular age range selected for regression is illustrated. Collectively, the simulation of age-misreporting errors in late-life human mortality data and a less-specific model choice than that of Barbi and colleagues highlight a clear alternative hypothesis to explanations based on evolution, the cessation of ageing, and population heterogeneity
This study examines how age misreporting typically affects estimates of mortality at older ages. We ...
BACKGROUND: Humans die at an increasing rate until late in life, when mortality rates level off. The...
Mortality rates differ across countries and years, and the country with the lowest observed mortalit...
This study highlights how the mortality plateau in Barbi and colleagues can be generated by low-freq...
This study highlights how the mortality plateau in Barbi and colleagues can be generated by low-freq...
Several organisms, including humans, display a deceleration in mortality rates at advanced ages. Thi...
(a) Observed hazard rate data (blue) from Barbi and colleagues [1], fitted by log-linear hazard rate...
Several organisms, including humans, display a deceleration in mortality rates at advanced ages. Thi...
The introduction of symmetrically distributed age-coding errors (a) into the log-linear model (orang...
Background: In low mortality countries, assessing future ageing depends to a large extent on scenari...
156 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2007.Common experience and biologi...
Widespread population aging has made it critical to understand death rates at old ages. However, stu...
In recent years, the importance of describing mortality at the limits of the life span has led to a ...
(a) Introducing random age-reporting errors into a log-linear model of mortality (solid black line) ...
We calculate life-table aging rates (LARs) for overall mortality by estimating a gamma-Gompertz-Make...
This study examines how age misreporting typically affects estimates of mortality at older ages. We ...
BACKGROUND: Humans die at an increasing rate until late in life, when mortality rates level off. The...
Mortality rates differ across countries and years, and the country with the lowest observed mortalit...
This study highlights how the mortality plateau in Barbi and colleagues can be generated by low-freq...
This study highlights how the mortality plateau in Barbi and colleagues can be generated by low-freq...
Several organisms, including humans, display a deceleration in mortality rates at advanced ages. Thi...
(a) Observed hazard rate data (blue) from Barbi and colleagues [1], fitted by log-linear hazard rate...
Several organisms, including humans, display a deceleration in mortality rates at advanced ages. Thi...
The introduction of symmetrically distributed age-coding errors (a) into the log-linear model (orang...
Background: In low mortality countries, assessing future ageing depends to a large extent on scenari...
156 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2007.Common experience and biologi...
Widespread population aging has made it critical to understand death rates at old ages. However, stu...
In recent years, the importance of describing mortality at the limits of the life span has led to a ...
(a) Introducing random age-reporting errors into a log-linear model of mortality (solid black line) ...
We calculate life-table aging rates (LARs) for overall mortality by estimating a gamma-Gompertz-Make...
This study examines how age misreporting typically affects estimates of mortality at older ages. We ...
BACKGROUND: Humans die at an increasing rate until late in life, when mortality rates level off. The...
Mortality rates differ across countries and years, and the country with the lowest observed mortalit...