Terrorist activities often exhibit temporal and spatial clustering, making the multivariate Hawkes process (MHP) a useful statistical model for analysing terrorism across different geographic regions. However, terror attack data from the Global Terrorism Database is reported as total event counts in disjoint observation periods, with precise event times unknown. When the MHP is only observed discretely, the likelihood function becomes intractable, hindering likelihood-based inference. To address this, we design an unbiased estimate of the intractable likelihood function using sequential Monte Carlo (SMC) based on a representation of the unobserved event times as latent variables in a state-space model. The unbiasedness of the SMC estimate allows for its use in place of the true likelihood in a Metropolis-Hastings algorithm, from which we construct a Markov Chain Monte Carlo sample of the distribution over the parameters of the MHP. Using simulated data, we assess the performance of our method and demonstrate that it outperforms an alternative method in the literature based on mean squared error. Terrorist activity in Afghanistan and Pakistan from 2018 to 2021 is analysed based on daily count data to examine the self- and cross-excitation effects of terrorism events.
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