As more and more datasets with self-exciting properties become available, the demand for robust models that capture contagion across events is also getting stronger. Hawkes processes stand out given their ability to capture a wide range of contagion and self-excitation patterns, including the transmission of infectious disease, earthquake aftershock distributions, near-repeat crime patterns, and overdose clusters. The Hawkes process is flexible in modeling these various applications through parametric and non-parametric kernels that model event dependencies in space, time and on networks. In this thesis, we develop new frameworks that integrate Hawkes Process models with multi-armed bandit algorithms, high dimensional marks, and high-dimens...
Hawkes Processes are probabilistic models use- ful for modelling the occurrences of events over ti...
Many real life processes that we would like to model have a self-exciting property, i.e. the occurre...
Self-exciting event sequences, in which the occurrence of an event increases the probability of trig...
As more and more datasets with self-exciting properties become available, the demand for robust mode...
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)As more and more datasets with self-excitin...
The counting process is the fundamental of many real-world problems with event data. Poisson process...
The counting process is the fundamental of many real-world problems with event data. Poisson pr...
Communities are affected adversely by a range of social harm events, such as crime, traffic crashes,...
Hawkes processes are a special class of inhomogenous Poisson processes used to model events exhibiti...
Hawkes processes are used in statistical modeling for event clustering and causal inference, while t...
Motivated by the analysis of crime data in Bucaramanga (Colombia), we propose a spatio-temporal Hawk...
In recent decades there has been tremendous growth in new statistical methods and applications for m...
Hawkes Processes are probabilistic models useful for modelling the occurrences of events over time. ...
Hawkes processes are a form of self-exciting process that has been used in numerous applications, in...
Hawkes processes are a form of self-exciting process that has been used in numerous applications, in...
Hawkes Processes are probabilistic models use- ful for modelling the occurrences of events over ti...
Many real life processes that we would like to model have a self-exciting property, i.e. the occurre...
Self-exciting event sequences, in which the occurrence of an event increases the probability of trig...
As more and more datasets with self-exciting properties become available, the demand for robust mode...
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)As more and more datasets with self-excitin...
The counting process is the fundamental of many real-world problems with event data. Poisson process...
The counting process is the fundamental of many real-world problems with event data. Poisson pr...
Communities are affected adversely by a range of social harm events, such as crime, traffic crashes,...
Hawkes processes are a special class of inhomogenous Poisson processes used to model events exhibiti...
Hawkes processes are used in statistical modeling for event clustering and causal inference, while t...
Motivated by the analysis of crime data in Bucaramanga (Colombia), we propose a spatio-temporal Hawk...
In recent decades there has been tremendous growth in new statistical methods and applications for m...
Hawkes Processes are probabilistic models useful for modelling the occurrences of events over time. ...
Hawkes processes are a form of self-exciting process that has been used in numerous applications, in...
Hawkes processes are a form of self-exciting process that has been used in numerous applications, in...
Hawkes Processes are probabilistic models use- ful for modelling the occurrences of events over ti...
Many real life processes that we would like to model have a self-exciting property, i.e. the occurre...
Self-exciting event sequences, in which the occurrence of an event increases the probability of trig...