Asymptotic Expansions for General Statistical Models e-bog
875,33 DKK
(inkl. moms 1094,16 DKK)
0.1. The aim of the book Our "e;Contributions to a General Asymptotic Statistical Theory"e; (Springer Lecture Notes in Statistics, Vol. 13, 1982, called "e;Vol. I"e; in the following) suggest to describe the local structure of a general family ~ of probability measures by its tangent space, and the local behavior of a functional K: ~ ~~k by its gradient. Starting from these basi...
E-bog
875,33 DKK
Forlag
Springer
Udgivet
27 november 2013
Genrer
Applied mathematics
Sprog
English
Format
pdf
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9781461564799
0.1. The aim of the book Our "e;Contributions to a General Asymptotic Statistical Theory"e; (Springer Lecture Notes in Statistics, Vol. 13, 1982, called "e;Vol. I"e; in the following) suggest to describe the local structure of a general family ~ of probability measures by its tangent space, and the local behavior of a functional K: ~ ~~k by its gradient. Starting from these basic concepts, asymptotic envelope power functions for tests and asymptotic bounds for the concentration of estimators are obtained, and heuristic procedures are suggested for the construction of test- and estimator-sequences attaining these bounds. In the present volume, these asymptotic investigations are carried one step further: From approximations by limit distributions to approximations by Edgeworth expansions, 1 2 adding one term (of order n- / ) to the limit distribution. As in Vol. I, the investigation is "e;general"e; in the sense of dealing with arbitrary families of probability measures and arbitrary functionals. The investigation is special in the sense that it is restricted to statistical procedures based on independent, identically distributed observations. 2 Moreover, it is special in the sense that its concern are "e;regular"e; models (i.e. families of probability measures and functionals which are subject to certain general conditions, like differentiability). Irregular models are certainly of mathematical interest. Since they are hardly of any practical relevance, it appears justifiable to exclude them at this stage of the investigation.