Abstract

Spatial scan statistics are commonly used for geographic disease cluster detection and evaluation. We propose and implement a modified version of the simulated annealing spatial scan statistic that incorporates the concept of “non-compactness” in order to penalize clusters that are very irregular in shape. We evaluate its power for the simulated annealing scan and compare it with the circular and elliptic spatial scan statistics. We observe that, with the non-compactness penalty, the simulated annealing method is competitive with the circular and elliptic scan statistic, and both have good power performance. The elliptic scan statistic is computationally faster and is well suited for mildly irregular clusters, but the simulated annealing method deals better with highly irregular cluster shapes. The new method is applied to breast cancer mortality data from northeastern United States.

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