B
Bo Friis Nielsen
Researcher at Technical University of Denmark
Publications - 92
Citations - 1497
Bo Friis Nielsen is an academic researcher from Technical University of Denmark. The author has contributed to research in topics: Markov chain & Markov process. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 89 publications receiving 1287 citations. Previous affiliations of Bo Friis Nielsen include University of Copenhagen & Information Technology University.
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A Markovian approach for modeling packet traffic with long-range dependence
TL;DR: The modeling approach allows the model to fit to additional descriptors while maintaining the second-order behavior of the counting process, and uses this to match interarrival time correlations.
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Passenger arrival and waiting time distributions dependent on train service frequency and station characteristics: A smart card data analysis
TL;DR: A general framework for estimating passenger waiting times which incorporates the arrival patterns of these two groups explicitly is proposed, namely by using a mixture distribution consisting of a uniform and a beta distribution which can improve waiting time estimations in public transport models.
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Vertical migration and dispersion of sprat (Sprattus sprattus) and herring (Clupea harengus) schools at dusk in the Baltic Sea
L. A. Fredrik Nilsson,Uffe Høgsbro Thygesen,Bo Lundgren,Bo Friis Nielsen,J. Rasmus Nielsen,Jan Beyer +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors report field measurements of the dispersal at dusk and examine two hypotheses through statistical modelling: that the vertical migration and the dissolution of schools are determined by decrease in light intensity, and that the dissolution can be modelled by diffusion, i.e. active repulsion is not required.
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Optimization of hospital ward resources with patient relocation using Markov chain modeling
TL;DR: A mathematical model is presented to solve the problem of ensuring sufficient beds to hospital wards by re-distributing beds that are already available to the hospital by statistically found to reflect occupancy of hospital beds by patients as a function of how hospital beds are distributed.