Auswahl der wissenschaftlichen Literatur zum Thema „Locally asymptotically normality“

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Zeitschriftenartikel zum Thema "Locally asymptotically normality"

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Boswijk, H. Peter. „MIXED NORMALITY AND ANCILLARITY IN I(2) SYSTEMS“. Econometric Theory 16, Nr. 6 (Dezember 2000): 878–904. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266466600166046.

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This paper studies asymptotic likelihood inference on cointegration parameters in systems integrated of order two. We start with so-called triangular systems and then extend the analysis to vector autoregressions. We show that even when all unit root restrictions have been imposed, the asymptotic observed information is not (locally) ancillary, which implies that the log-likelihood ratio is not locally asymptotically mixed normal. The results are applied to inference on polynomial cointegration. Some similarities and differences with I(1) systems are also discussed.
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Bentarzi, Mohamed, und Marc Hallin. „Locally Optimal Tests against Periodic Autoregression: Parametric and Nonparametric Approaches“. Econometric Theory 12, Nr. 1 (März 1996): 88–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266466600006459.

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Locally asymptotically optimal tests are derived for the null hypothesis of traditional AR dependence, with unspecified AR coefficients and unspecified innovation densities, against an alternative of periodically correlated AR dependence. Parametric and nonparametric rank-based versions are proposed. Local powers and asymptotic relative efficiencies (with respect, e.g., to the corresponding Gaussian Lagrange multiplier tests proposed in Ghysels and Hall [1992, “Lagrange Multiplier Tests for Periodic Structures,” unpublished manuscript, CRDE, Montreal] and Liitkepohl [1991, Introduction to Multiple Time Series Analysis, Berlin: Springer-Verlag; 1991, pp. 243–264, in W.E. Griffiths, H. Liitkepohl, & M.E. Block (eds.), Readings in Econometric Theory and Practice, Amsterdam: North-Holland] are computed explicitly; a rank-based test of the van der Waerden type is proposed, for which this ARE is uniformly larger than 1. The main technical tool is Le Cam's local asymptotic normality property.
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Saidi, Abdessamad, und Roch Roy. „ROBUST OPTIMAL TESTS FOR CAUSALITY IN MULTIVARIATE TIME SERIES“. Econometric Theory 24, Nr. 4 (04.04.2008): 948–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266466608080377.

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Here, we derive optimal rank-based tests for noncausality in the sense of Granger between two multivariate time series. Assuming that the global process admits a joint stationary vector autoregressive (VAR) representation with an elliptically symmetric innovation density, both no feedback and one direction causality hypotheses are tested. Using the characterization of noncausality in the VAR context, the local asymptotic normality (LAN) theory described in Le Cam (1986, Asymptotic Methods in Statistical Decision Theory) allows for constructing locally and asymptotically optimal tests for the null hypothesis of noncausality in one or both directions. These tests are based on multivariate residual ranks and signs (Hallin and Paindaveine, 2004a, Annals of Statistics 32, 2642–2678) and are shown to be asymptotically distribution free under elliptically symmetric innovation densities and invariant with respect to some affine transformations. Local powers and asymptotic relative efficiencies are also derived. The level, power, and robustness (to outliers) of the resulting tests are studied by simulation and are compared to those of the Wald test. Finally, the new tests are applied to Canadian money and income data.
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Lmakri, Aziz, Abdelhadi Akharif und Amal Mellouk. „Optimal Detection of Bilinear Dependence in Short Panels of Regression Data“. Revista Colombiana de Estadística 43, Nr. 2 (01.07.2020): 143–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.15446/rce.v43n2.83044.

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In this paper, we propose parametric and nonparametric locally andasymptotically optimal tests for regression models with superdiagonal bilinear time series errors in short panel data (large n, small T). We establish a local asymptotic normality property– with respect to intercept μ, regression coefficient β, the scale parameter σ of the error, and the parameter b of panel superdiagonal bilinear model (which is the parameter of interest)– for a given density f1 of the error terms. Rank-based versions of optimal parametric tests are provided. This result, which allows, by Hájek’s representation theorem, the construction of locally asymptotically optimal rank-based tests for the null hypothesis b = 0 (absence of panel superdiagonal bilinear model). These tests –at specified innovation densities f1– are optimal (most stringent), but remain valid under any actual underlying density. From contiguity, we obtain the limiting distribution of our test statistics under the null and local sequences of alternatives. The asymptotic relative efficiencies, with respect to the pseudo-Gaussian parametric tests, are derived. A Monte Carlo study confirms the good performance of the proposed tests.
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Dissertationen zum Thema "Locally asymptotically normality"

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Salman, Youssef. „Testing a class of time-varying coefficients CHARN models with application to change-point study“. Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université de Lorraine, 2022. http://www.theses.fr/2022LORR0170.

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Dans cette thèse, nous étudions un test du rapport de vraisemblance pour détecter les ruptures faibles dans la moyenne conditionnelle d'une classe de modèles CHARN à coefficients dépendants du temps. Nous établissons la structure de normalité asymptotique locale (LAN) de la famille de vraisemblances étudiées. Nous montrons l'optimalité asymptotique du test et donnons une expression explicite de sa puissance locale en fonction des potentiels points de rupture et des amplitudes des ruptures. Nous décrivons des stratégies de détection des ruptures et d'estimation de leurs localisations. Les estimateurs sont obtenus comme indices de temps rendant maximal un estimateur de la puissance locale. Les simulations numériques que nous faisons montrent de bonnes performances de notre méthode sur les exemples considérés
In this thesis, we study a likelihood ratio test for detecting multiple weak changes in the conditional mean of a class of time-dependent coefficients CHARN models.We establish the locally asymptotically normality (LAN) structure of the family of likelihoods under study. We prove that the test is asymptotically optimal, and we give an explicit form of its asymptotic local power as a function of candidates change locations and changes magnitudes. We describe some strategies for weak change-points detection and their location estimates. The estimates are obtained as the time indices maximizing an estimate of the local power. The simulation study we conduct shows the good performance of our methods on the examples considered
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Bücher zum Thema "Locally asymptotically normality"

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Cheng, Russell. Standard Asymptotic Theory. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198505044.003.0003.

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This book relies on maximum likelihood (ML) estimation of parameters. Asymptotic theory assumes regularity conditions hold when the ML estimator is consistent. Typically an additional third derivative condition is assumed to ensure that the ML estimator is also asymptotically normally distributed. Standard asymptotic results that then hold are summarized in this chapter; for example, the asymptotic variance of the ML estimator is then given by the Fisher information formula, and the log-likelihood ratio, the Wald and the score statistics for testing the statistical significance of parameter estimates are all asymptotically equivalent. Also, the useful profile log-likelihood then behaves exactly as a standard log-likelihood only in a parameter space of just one dimension. Further, the model can be reparametrized to make it locally orthogonal in the neighbourhood of the true parameter value. The large exponential family of models is briefly reviewed where a unified set of regular conditions can be obtained.
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Buchteile zum Thema "Locally asymptotically normality"

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Tarima, Sergey, und Nancy Flournoy. „Choosing Interim Sample Sizes in Group Sequential Designs“. In German Medical Data Sciences: Bringing Data to Life. IOS Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/shti210043.

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This manuscript investigates sample sizes for interim analyses in group sequential designs. Traditional group sequential designs (GSD) rely on “information fraction” arguments to define the interim sample sizes. Then, interim maximum likelihood estimators (MLEs) are used to decide whether to stop early or continue the data collection until the next interim analysis. The possibility of early stopping changes the distribution of interim and final MLEs: possible interim decisions on trial stopping excludes some sample space elements. At each interim analysis the distribution of an interim MLE is a mixture of truncated and untruncated distributions. The distributional form of an MLE becomes more and more complicated with each additional interim analysis. Test statistics that are asymptotically normal without a possibly of early stopping, become mixtures of truncated normal distributions under local alternatives. Stage-specific information ratios are equivalent to sample size ratios for independent and identically distributed data. This equivalence is used to justify interim sample sizes in GSDs. Because stage-specific information ratios derived from normally distributed data differ from those derived from non-normally distributed data, the former equivalence is invalid when there is a possibility of early stopping. Tarima and Flournoy [3] have proposed a new GSD where interim sample sizes are determined by a pre-defined sequence of ordered alternative hypotheses, and the calculation of information fractions is not needed. This innovation allows researchers to prescribe interim analyses based on desired power properties. This work compares interim power properties of a classical one-sided three stage Pocock design with a one-sided three stage design driven by three ordered alternatives.
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Berichte der Organisationen zum Thema "Locally asymptotically normality"

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Amengual, Dante, Xinyue Bei, Marine Carrasco und Enrique Sentana. Score-type tests for normal mixtures. CIRANO, Januar 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.54932/uxsg1990.

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Testing normality against discrete normal mixtures is complex because some parameters turn increasingly underidentified along alternative ways of approaching the null, others are inequality constrained, and several higher-order derivatives become identically 0. These problems make the maximum of the alternative model log-likelihood function numerically unreliable. We propose score-type tests asymptotically equivalent to the likelihood ratio as the largest of two simple intuitive statistics that only require estimation under the null. One novelty of our approach is that we treat symmetrically both ways of writing the null hypothesis without excluding any region of the parameter space. We derive the asymptotic distribution of our tests under the null and sequences of local alternatives. We also show that their asymptotic distribution is the same whether applied to observations or standardized residuals from heteroskedastic regression models. Finally, we study their power in simulations and apply them to the residuals of Mincer earnings functions.
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