Nonanticipating estimation applied to sequential analysis and changepoint detection
Publication:2569247
DOI10.1214/009053605000000183zbMath1077.62067arXivmath/0507434OpenAlexW3100345934MaRDI QIDQ2569247
Publication date: 18 October 2005
Published in: The Annals of Statistics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/math/0507434
surveillancerenewal theoryCUSUMquality controlGamma distributionstatistical process controlnonlinear renewal theorypower one testsShiryayev-Roberts
Applications of statistics in engineering and industry; control charts (62P30) Monte Carlo methods (65C05) Sequential statistical analysis (62L10) Applications of renewal theory (reliability, demand theory, etc.) (60K10) Asymptotic properties of parametric tests (62F05)
Related Items (22)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Sequential detection of a change in a normal mean when the initial value is unknown
- Sequential analysis. Tests and confidence intervals
- Boundary crossing probabilities and statistical applications
- Average run lengths of an optimal method of detecting a change in distribution
- The expected sample size of some tests of power one
- Approximations to the expected sample size of certain sequential tests
- A nonlinear renewal theory with applications to sequential analysis. I
- Optimality and almost optimality of mixture stopping rules
- A new representation for a renewal-theoretic constant appearing in asymptotic approximations of large deviations
- Using the generalized likelihood ratio statistic for sequential detection of a change-point
- A note on the run length of false alarm of a change-point detection policy
- Nonanticipating estimation applied to sequential analysis and changepoint detection
- A simple comparision of mixture vs. nonanticipating estimation
- On Moment Generating Functions and Renewal Theory
- On Optimum Methods in Quickest Detection Problems
This page was built for publication: Nonanticipating estimation applied to sequential analysis and changepoint detection