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In relational event networks, the tendency for actors to interact with each other depends greatly on the past interactions between the actors in a social network. Both the quantity of past interactions and the time that elapsed since the past interactions occurred affect the actors decision-making to interact with other actors in the network. Recently occurred events generally have a stronger influence on current interaction behavior than past events that occurred a long time ago--a phenomenon known as memory decay. Previous studies either predefined a short-run and long-run memory or fixed a parametric exponential memory using a predefined half-life period. In real-life relational event networks however it is generally unknown how the memory of actors about the past events fades as time goes by. For this reason it is not recommendable to fix this in an ad hoc manner, but instead we should learn the shape of memory decay from the observed data. In this paper, a novel semi-parametric approach based on Bayesian Model Averaging is proposed for learning the shape of the memory decay without requiring any parametric assumptions. The method is applied to relational event history data among socio-political actors in India.
The evolution of communities in dynamic (time-varying) network data is a prominent topic of interest. A popular approach to understanding these dynamic networks is to embed the dyadic relations into a latent metric space. While methods for clustering
This paper extends Bayesian mortality projection models for multiple populations considering the stochastic structure and the effect of spatial autocorrelation among the observations. We explain high levels of overdispersion according to adjacent loc
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Accurate models of clinical actions and their impacts on disease progression are critical for estimating personalized optimal dynamic treatment regimes (DTRs) in medical/health research, especially in managing chronic conditions. Traditional statisti