Empirical likelihood for multidimensional linear model with missing responses (Q428349): Difference between revisions
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Summary: Imputation is a popular technique for handling missing data especially for plenty of missing values. Usually, the empirical log-likelihood ratio statistic under imputation is asymptotically scaled chi-squared because the imputing data are not i.i.d. Recently, a bias-corrected technique is used to study linear regression models with missing response data, and the resulting empirical likelihood ratio is asymptotically chi-squared. However, it may suffer from the ``the curse of high dimension'' in multidimensional linear regression models for the nonparametric estimator of the selection probability function. In this paper, a parametric selection probability function is introduced to avoid the dimension problem. With the similar bias-corrected method, the proposed empirical likelihood statistic is asymptotically chi-squared when the selection probability is specified correctly and even asymptotically scaled chi-squared when specified incorrectly. In addition, our empirical likelihood estimator is always consistent whether the selection probability is specified correctly or not, and will achieve full efficiency when specified correctly. A simulation study indicates that the proposed method is comparable in terms of coverage probabilities. | |||
Property / review text: Summary: Imputation is a popular technique for handling missing data especially for plenty of missing values. Usually, the empirical log-likelihood ratio statistic under imputation is asymptotically scaled chi-squared because the imputing data are not i.i.d. Recently, a bias-corrected technique is used to study linear regression models with missing response data, and the resulting empirical likelihood ratio is asymptotically chi-squared. However, it may suffer from the ``the curse of high dimension'' in multidimensional linear regression models for the nonparametric estimator of the selection probability function. In this paper, a parametric selection probability function is introduced to avoid the dimension problem. With the similar bias-corrected method, the proposed empirical likelihood statistic is asymptotically chi-squared when the selection probability is specified correctly and even asymptotically scaled chi-squared when specified incorrectly. In addition, our empirical likelihood estimator is always consistent whether the selection probability is specified correctly or not, and will achieve full efficiency when specified correctly. A simulation study indicates that the proposed method is comparable in terms of coverage probabilities. / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 62G08 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 62G05 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 62J05 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 62H12 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 65C60 / rank | |||
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Property / zbMATH DE Number: 6047879 / rank | |||
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Revision as of 23:17, 29 June 2023
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English | Empirical likelihood for multidimensional linear model with missing responses |
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Empirical likelihood for multidimensional linear model with missing responses (English)
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19 June 2012
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Summary: Imputation is a popular technique for handling missing data especially for plenty of missing values. Usually, the empirical log-likelihood ratio statistic under imputation is asymptotically scaled chi-squared because the imputing data are not i.i.d. Recently, a bias-corrected technique is used to study linear regression models with missing response data, and the resulting empirical likelihood ratio is asymptotically chi-squared. However, it may suffer from the ``the curse of high dimension'' in multidimensional linear regression models for the nonparametric estimator of the selection probability function. In this paper, a parametric selection probability function is introduced to avoid the dimension problem. With the similar bias-corrected method, the proposed empirical likelihood statistic is asymptotically chi-squared when the selection probability is specified correctly and even asymptotically scaled chi-squared when specified incorrectly. In addition, our empirical likelihood estimator is always consistent whether the selection probability is specified correctly or not, and will achieve full efficiency when specified correctly. A simulation study indicates that the proposed method is comparable in terms of coverage probabilities.
0 references