SandraChristine wrote:That helps a lot! just one more point I'm not clear on:
Having read 10.2, I see that I gain an extra S parameter by recovering individuals after the recapture periods (this still holds true with your recommendation to use recoveries from one occasion as deaths for the preceding interval). But I still don't understand how I lose a p parameter... (in a model with only live recapture data you have one more p than S, so if the combination of live and dead data gives me an extra S parameter, wouldn't I expect the same number of S and p parameters?). But I end up with only 5 p parameters when I have 6 occasions.
For a live encounter study with n occasions and (say) two primary structural parameters (say, phi and p for a live encounter study), you end up with 2 x (n-1) parameters, not all of which are separately identifiable. For example, for a 7 occasion live encounter study, you have 6 phi and 6 p estimates, of which only 11 are estimable (first 5 phi, first 5 p, and a function of the terminal phi*p product).
You state that in a live recapture data you have 'one more S than p' - this is incorrect - and suggests you're not fully understanding the larger issue of parameter structure, and identifiability, of even the simpler models. Make sure you understand for live encounters (alone) and dead recoveries (alone) before you tackle combining the two.