Pages that link to "Item:Q1074218"
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The following pages link to Normal and stable convergence of integral functions of the empirical distribution function (Q1074218):
Displaying 22 items.
- Heavy-traffic approximations for fractionally integrated random walks in the domain of attraction of a non-Gaussian stable distribution (Q424472) (← links)
- On the hybrids of \(k\)-spacing empirical and partial sum processes (Q506423) (← links)
- Estimating L-functionals for heavy-tailed distributions and application (Q609711) (← links)
- Return level bounds for discrete and continuous random variables (Q619125) (← links)
- An outlier test for linear processes (Q685769) (← links)
- Trimmed sums of long range dependent moving averages (Q951214) (← links)
- Non-central limit theorems for random selections (Q975304) (← links)
- Selection from a stable box (Q1002578) (← links)
- What portion of the sample makes a partial sum asymptotically stable or normal? (Q1062345) (← links)
- Uniform convergence of sums of order statistics to stable laws (Q1093242) (← links)
- A probabilistic approach to the asymptotic distribution of sums of independent, identically distributed random variables (Q1110899) (← links)
- Approximations of weighted empirical and quantile processes (Q1122863) (← links)
- Estimating the index of a stable distribution (Q1304084) (← links)
- How do bootstrap and permutation tests work? (Q1412364) (← links)
- Invariance principles for sums of extreme sequential order statistics attracted to Lévy processes (Q1613594) (← links)
- On the rate of convergence of sums of extremes to a stable law (Q1824272) (← links)
- On the central limit theorem for modulus trimmed sums (Q2452777) (← links)
- Estimating the parameters of an \({\alpha}\)-stable distribution using the existence of moments of order statistics (Q2453924) (← links)
- ASYMPTOTIC BEHAVIOR OF TRIMMED SUMS (Q2888807) (← links)
- Laws of the iterated logarithm for sums of the middle portion of the sample (Q3027990) (← links)
- The Chow and Robbins Fixed Width Confidence Interval Procedure When the Second Moment Barely Does Not Exist (Q3155686) (← links)
- A random walk through Canadian contributions on empirical processes and their applications in probability and statistics (Q6059414) (← links)