The shape of Bayes tests of power one (Q1083163): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 15:19, 10 December 2024

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The shape of Bayes tests of power one
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    The shape of Bayes tests of power one (English)
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    1986
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    Given a Brownian motion with unknown drift \(d\in {\mathbb{R}}\) and \(P_ d\) the associated measure, a test of power one for the decision problem \(H_ 0: d\neq 0\) versus \(H_ 1: d=0\) is by definition a stopping time T which satisfies the conditions \(P_ 0(t<\infty)<1\) and \(P_ d(T<\infty)=1\) if \(d\neq 0\). Here stopping also means a decision in favour of ''d\(\neq 0''\). If the unit sampling cost c depends on d in an appropriate way, it turns out that a simple Bayes rule is approximately optimal. Such a rule stops sampling when the posterior probability of the hypothesis is too small. The paper is organized as follows: Theorem 1 states the existence of an optimal (Bayes) stopping rule \(T_ c\). Theorem 2 gives upper and lower bounds for \(T_ c\) which make it possible to derive its asymptotic shape when c tends to zero. Theorem 3 refines these bounds, which yields an o(c)-approximation of the minimal Bayes risk (Theorem 4). Finally, Theorem 5 treats the one-sided case.
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    composite hypotheses
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    Brownian motion
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    unknown drift
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    test of power one
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    simple Bayes rule
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    existence
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    upper and lower bounds
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    minimal Bayes risk
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