Spread of AIDS
Part 4: Summary: Using
Your Model Function
- Describe in general terms what
you have learned about the growth pattern in the early stages of the AIDS
epidemic. Can you describe some biological, sociological, or epidemiological
factors that might explain this growth pattern if you had enough information
about them?
- Use your model function to estimate
- the number of AIDS cases
at the start of 1989;
- the number of AIDS cases
at the end of 1992;
- the month in which the number
of AIDS cases passed 10,000.
How confident are you of each
of these estimates? Can you think of any reasons why one or more of them
might not be reasonably accurate?
- CDC reported in 1999 that the
number of reported AIDS cases through June 30 of that year was 711,344. Does
that essentially agree with what your model function would have predicted,
or is there a large discrepancy? If there is a large discrepancy, what factors
do you think might account for the model not fitting very well in 1999? [Source:
MMWR Recommendations
and Reports, Dec. 10, 1999, Vol. 48, No. RR-13.]
- What do the relative residuals
tell us about whether residuals in a model are "small" or "large"?
- Some of the characteristics
of a good fit are that the relative residuals should not be wildly different
in size, their signs should not be "predictable," and there should
not be any obvious pattern in them. Did your relative residuals satisfy these
criteria? If not, what do these criteria tell you about how you might achieve
a better fit?