Inference about a change point in experimental neurophysiology
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1075967
DOI10.1016/0025-5564(86)90068-4zbMath0592.92010OpenAlexW1969249400MaRDI QIDQ1075967
Florence Pinatel, Daniel Commenges, John Seal
Publication date: 1986
Published in: Mathematical Biosciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0025-5564(86)90068-4
estimationmaximum likelihood estimationchange pointelectrical discharge of single neuronsexperimental neurophysiologymean latency time
Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis (62P10) Point estimation (62F10) Physiological, cellular and medical topics (92Cxx)
Related Items
Testing mean changes by maximal ratio statistics ⋮ ON EXACT INFERENCE FOR CHANGE IN A POISSON SEQUENCE ⋮ Testing epidemic change in nearly nonstationary process with statistics based on residuals ⋮ The limit distribution of the maximum increment of a random walk with regularly varying jump size distribution ⋮ Convergence of \(U\)-processes in Hölder spaces with application to robust detection of a changed segment ⋮ A computational method for the detection of activation/deactivation patterns in biological signals with three levels of electric intensity ⋮ Estimation of change points of infinite dimensional parameters in short epidemics ⋮ Activity pattern detection in electroneurographic and electromyogram signals through a heteroscedastic change-point method ⋮ Testing for the number of change points in a sequence of exponential random variables ⋮ Estimating a changed segment in a sample ⋮ Estimating latency from inhibitory input ⋮ Asymptotic independence of three statistics of maximal segmental scores
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- A Markov model for switching regressions
- The log likelihood ratio in segmented regression
- A Biometrics Invited Paper. Stochastic Models for Single Neuron Firing Trains: A Survey
- Inference about the change-point in a sequence of random variables
- Estimating the Current Mean of a Normal Distribution which is Subjected to Changes in Time
- Note on the Consistency of the Maximum Likelihood Estimate
- A new look at the statistical model identification