Modeling Demographic Processes in Marked Populations

Modeling Demographic Processes in Marked Populations

Author: David L. Thomson

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2008-12-11

Total Pages: 1110

ISBN-13: 038778151X

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Here, biologists and statisticians come together in an interdisciplinary synthesis with the aim of developing new methods to overcome the most significant challenges and constraints faced by quantitative biologists seeking to model demographic rates.


Modeling Demographic Processes in Marked Populations

Modeling Demographic Processes in Marked Populations

Author: David L. Thomson

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2016-05-01

Total Pages: 1156

ISBN-13: 9781489979100

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Here, biologists and statisticians come together in an interdisciplinary synthesis with the aim of developing new methods to overcome the most significant challenges and constraints faced by quantitative biologists seeking to model demographic rates.


Modeling Demographic Processes in Marked Populations

Modeling Demographic Processes in Marked Populations

Author: David L. Thomson

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2010-11-16

Total Pages: 1132

ISBN-13: 9780387569741

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Here, biologists and statisticians come together in an interdisciplinary synthesis with the aim of developing new methods to overcome the most significant challenges and constraints faced by quantitative biologists seeking to model demographic rates.


Modelling Population Dynamics

Modelling Population Dynamics

Author: K. B. Newman

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2014-07-16

Total Pages: 223

ISBN-13: 1493909770

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This book gives a unifying framework for estimating the abundance of open populations: populations subject to births, deaths and movement, given imperfect measurements or samples of the populations. The focus is primarily on populations of vertebrates for which dynamics are typically modelled within the framework of an annual cycle, and for which stochastic variability in the demographic processes is usually modest. Discrete-time models are developed in which animals can be assigned to discrete states such as age class, gender, maturity, population (within a metapopulation), or species (for multi-species models). The book goes well beyond estimation of abundance, allowing inference on underlying population processes such as birth or recruitment, survival and movement. This requires the formulation and fitting of population dynamics models. The resulting fitted models yield both estimates of abundance and estimates of parameters characterizing the underlying processes.


Demography

Demography

Author: Samuel Preston

Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell

Published: 2000-10-03

Total Pages: 308

ISBN-13: 9781557864512

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This book presents and develops the basic methods and models that are used by demographers to study the behaviour of human populations. The procedures are clearly and concisely developed from first principles and extensive applications are presented.


Dynamic Population Models

Dynamic Population Models

Author: Robert Schoen

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2007-05-05

Total Pages: 254

ISBN-13: 1402052308

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Dynamic Population Models is the first book to comprehensively discuss and synthesize the emerging field of dynamic modeling. Incorporating the latest research, it includes thorough discussions of population growth and momentum under gradual fertility declines, the impact of changes in the timing of events on fertility measures, and the complex relationship between period and cohort measures. The book is designed to be accessible to those with only a minimal knowledge of calculus.


Advanced Techniques of Population Analysis

Advanced Techniques of Population Analysis

Author: S.S. Halli

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 1992-03-31

Total Pages: 258

ISBN-13: 9780306439971

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Utilizing the most recent developments in statistical modeling as applied to population studies, the authors interpret results obtained from available software and apply these results to current research issues.


Modeling Multigroup Populations

Modeling Multigroup Populations

Author: Robert Schoen

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 1987-10-31

Total Pages: 324

ISBN-13: 9780306426490

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This book deals with models that can capture the behavior of individuals and groups over time. Organizationally, it is divided into three parts. Part I discusses the basic, decrement-only, life table and its associated stable population. Part II examines multistate (or increment-decrement) models and provides the first comprehensive treatment of those extremely flexible and useful life table models. Part III looks at "two-sex" models, which simultaneously incorporate the marriage or fertility behavior of males and females. Those models are explored more fully and completely here than has been the case to date, and the importance of including the experience of both sexes is demonstrated analytically as weil as empirically. In sum, this book considers a broad range of population models with a view to showing that such models can be eminently calculable, clearly interpretable, and analytically valuable for the study of many kinds of social behavior. Four appendixes have been added to make the book more usable. Appendix A provides abrief introduction to calculus and matrix algebra so that readers can understand, though not necessarily derive, the equations presented. Appendix B provides an index of the principal symbols used. Appendix C gives the answers to the exercises found at the end of each chapter. Those exercises should be seen as an extension of the text, and are intended to inform as weil as to challenge.


Introduction to Population Modeling

Introduction to Population Modeling

Author: J. C. Frauenthal

Publisher:

Published: 1980

Total Pages: 210

ISBN-13:

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The focus is on the formulation and solution of mathematical models with the idea of a population employed mainly as a pedogogical tool. If the biological setting is stripped away, the material can be interpreted as topics or the qualitative behavior of differential and difference equations. The first group of models investigate the dynamics of a single species, with particular interest in the consequences of treating time and population size in discrete and continuous terms. The second group study is the interaction of two or more species. A final section on complexity and stability attempts to summarize one of the basic questions in ecology using many of the developed ideas. At the conclusion of each topic, problems are provided to provide practice with mathematical concepts and techniques and an annotated list of references is also given at these points in the material. The document concludes with solutions to problems. (MP)