Estimation in Semiparametric Models Some Recent Developments için kapak resmi
Estimation in Semiparametric Models Some Recent Developments
Başlık:
Estimation in Semiparametric Models Some Recent Developments
ISBN:
9781461233961
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed. 1990.
Yayın Bilgileri:
New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 1990.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
III, 112 p. online resource.
Series:
Lecture Notes in Statistics, 63
Contents:
A Survey of basic theory -- 1. Tangent spaces and gradients -- 2. Asymptotic bounds for the concentration of estimator-sequences -- 3. Constructing estimator-sequences -- 4. Estimation in semiparametric models -- 5. Families of gradients -- 6. Estimating equations -- B Semiparametric families admitting a sufficient statistic -- 7. A special semiparametric model -- 8. Mixture models -- 9. Examples of mixture models -- L Auxiliary results -- References -- Notation index.
Abstract:
Assume one has to estimate the mean J x P( dx) (or the median of P, or any other functional t;;(P)) on the basis ofi.i.d. observations from P. Ifnothing is known about P, then the sample mean is certainly the best estimator one can think of. If P is known to be the member of a certain parametric family, say {Po: {) E e}, one can usually do better by estimating {) first, say by {)(n)(.~.), and using J XPo(n)(;r.) (dx) as an estimate for J xPo(dx). There is an "intermediate" range, where we know something about the unknown probability measure P, but less than parametric theory takes for granted. Practical problems have always led statisticians to invent estimators for such intermediate models, but it usually remained open whether these estimators are nearly optimal or not. There was one exception: The case of "adaptivity", where a "nonparametric" estimate exists which is asymptotically optimal for any parametric submodel. The standard (and for a long time only) example of such a fortunate situation was the estimation of the center of symmetry for a distribution of unknown shape.
Dil:
English