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1.
J Epidemiol Glob Health ; 11(2): 146-149, 2021 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33605119

RESUMO

This manuscript brings attention to inaccurate epidemiological concepts that emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic. In social media and scientific journals, some wrong references were given to a "normal epidemic curve" and also to a "log-normal curve/distribution". For many years, textbooks and courses of reputable institutions and scientific journals have disseminated misleading concepts. For example, calling histogram to plots of epidemic curves or using epidemic data to introduce the concept of a Gaussian distribution, ignoring its temporal indexing. Although an epidemic curve may look like a Gaussian curve and be eventually modelled by a Gauss function, it is not a normal distribution or a log-normal, as some authors claim. A pandemic produces highly-complex data and to tackle it effectively statistical and mathematical modelling need to go beyond the "one-size-fits-all solution". Classical textbooks need to be updated since pandemics happen and epidemiology needs to provide reliable information to policy recommendations and actions.


Assuntos
COVID-19/epidemiologia , Projetos de Pesquisa Epidemiológica , Modelos Estatísticos , Pandemias/estatística & dados numéricos , Humanos , Distribuição Normal , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , SARS-CoV-2
2.
PLoS One ; 9(7): e102380, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25054540

RESUMO

Covering almost a quarter of Brazil, the Cerrado is the world's most biologically rich tropical savanna. Fire is an integral part of the Cerrado but current land use and agricultural practices have been changing fire regimes, with undesirable consequences for the preservation of biodiversity. In this study, fire frequency and fire return intervals were modelled over a 12-year time series (1997-2008) for the Jalapão State Park, a protected area in the north of the Cerrado, based on burned area maps derived from Landsat imagery. Burned areas were classified using object based image analysis. Fire data were modelled with the discrete lognormal model and the estimated parameters were used to calculate fire interval, fire survival and hazard of burning distributions, for seven major land cover types. Over the study period, an area equivalent to four times the size of Jalapão State Park burned and the mean annual area burned was 34%. Median fire intervals were generally short, ranging from three to six years. Shrub savannas had the shortest fire intervals, and dense woodlands the longest. Because fires in the Cerrado are strongly responsive to fuel age in the first three to four years following a fire, early dry season patch mosaic burning may be used to reduce the extent of area burned and the severity of fire effects.


Assuntos
Conservação dos Recursos Naturais/métodos , Incêndios , Pradaria , Modelos Teóricos , Algoritmos , Brasil , Desastres , Ecossistema , Geografia , Humanos , Estações do Ano , Fatores de Tempo , Árvores/crescimento & desenvolvimento
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