The place of the \(L_ 1\)-norm in robust estimation (Q1091694)
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English | The place of the \(L_ 1\)-norm in robust estimation |
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The place of the \(L_ 1\)-norm in robust estimation (English)
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1987
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In robust estimation, \(L_ 1\)-methods serve two main purposes: They provide estimates with minimal bias if the observations are asymmetrically contaminated, and they furnish convenient starting values for estimates based on iterative procedures. In general, such \(L_ 1\)- estimates are weighted ones, but there are problems with the choice of weights. It is pointed out that the two most popular choices of weights are non- robust: with constant weights, the estimates are sensitive to outliers at influential points, and with Hampel-Krasker-Welsch-type weights they are sensitive to local shifts. Other M-estimates of regression suffer from the same problem. Some recommendations for qualitative improvement are given.
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regression diagnostics
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breakdown point
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sensitivity
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generalization of sample median
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\(L_ 1\)-estimation
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minimax asymptotic bias
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multiple regression
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robust estimation
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minimal bias
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iterative procedures
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choice of weights
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constant weights
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outliers
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influential points
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Hampel- Krasker-Welsch-type weights
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local shifts
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M-estimates
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