Quantile Processes with Statistical Applications


Book Description

Provides a comprehensive theory of the approximations of quantile processes as well as some of their statistical applications.




Quantile Processes with Statistical Applications


Book Description

Provides a comprehensive theory of the approximations of quantile processes in light of recent advances, as well as some of their statistical applications.




Statistical Modelling with Quantile Functions


Book Description

Galton used quantiles more than a hundred years ago in describing data. Tukey and Parzen used them in the 60s and 70s in describing populations. Since then, the authors of many papers, both theoretical and practical, have used various aspects of quantiles in their work. Until now, however, no one put all the ideas together to form what turns out to




Introduction to Empirical Processes and Semiparametric Inference


Book Description

Kosorok’s brilliant text provides a self-contained introduction to empirical processes and semiparametric inference. These powerful research techniques are surprisingly useful for developing methods of statistical inference for complex models and in understanding the properties of such methods. This is an authoritative text that covers all the bases, and also a friendly and gradual introduction to the area. The book can be used as research reference and textbook.




Empirical Processes with Applications to Statistics


Book Description

Originally published in 1986, this valuable reference provides a detailed treatment of limit theorems and inequalities for empirical processes of real-valued random variables; applications of the theory to censored data, spacings, rank statistics, quantiles, and many functionals of empirical processes, including a treatment of bootstrap methods; and a summary of inequalities that are useful for proving limit theorems. At the end of the Errata section, the authors have supplied references to solutions for 11 of the 19 Open Questions provided in the book's original edition. Audience: researchers in statistical theory, probability theory, biostatistics, econometrics, and computer science.




Quantile Processes with Statistical Applications


Book Description

Provides a comprehensive theory of the approximations of quantile processes in light of recent advances, as well as some of their statistical applications.




Quantile-Based Reliability Analysis


Book Description

This book provides a fresh approach to reliability theory, an area that has gained increasing relevance in fields from statistics and engineering to demography and insurance. Its innovative use of quantile functions gives an analysis of lifetime data that is generally simpler, more robust, and more accurate than the traditional methods, and opens the door for further research in a wide variety of fields involving statistical analysis. In addition, the book can be used to good effect in the classroom as a text for advanced undergraduate and graduate courses in Reliability and Statistics.




Lectures on Empirical Processes


Book Description




Statistical Applications in the Earth Sciences


Book Description

Collection of papers presented at the Colloquium, covering the broad subject areas of spatial data integration, statistical analysis of geoscience data, and quantitative stratigraphy. Working Group reports are included as well.




Approximate Distributions of Order Statistics


Book Description

This book is designed as a unified and mathematically rigorous treatment of some recent developments of the asymptotic distribution theory of order statistics (including the extreme order statistics) that are relevant for statistical theory and its applications. Particular emphasis is placed on results concern ing the accuracy oflimit theorems, on higher order approximations, and other approximations in quite a general sense. Contrary to the classical limit theorems that primarily concern the weak convergence of distribution functions, our main results will be formulated in terms of the variational and the Hellinger distance. These results will form the proper springboard for the investigation of parametric approximations of nonparametric models of joint distributions of order statistics. The approxi mating models include normal as well as extreme value models. Several applications will show the usefulness of this approach. Other recent developments in statistics like nonparametric curve estima tion and the bootstrap method will be studied as far as order statistics are concerned. 1n connection with this, graphical methods will, to some extent, be explored.