Semi-empirical likelihood ratio confidence intervals for the difference of two sample means
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1336548
DOI10.1007/BF00773597zbMath0802.62052MaRDI QIDQ1336548
Publication date: 22 November 1994
Published in: Annals of the Institute of Statistical Mathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)
confidence intervals; likelihood ratio statistic; empirical likelihood method; Wilks' theorem; semiparametric problem
62G10: Nonparametric hypothesis testing
62F25: Parametric tolerance and confidence regions
62F03: Parametric hypothesis testing
62G15: Nonparametric tolerance and confidence regions
Related Items
Empirical likelihood ratio for two-sample compound Poisson processes under infinite second moment, Empirical likelihood ratio under infinite second moment for two-sample problems, Empirical likelihood ratio for two-sample compound Poisson process problems, Semiparametric estimation of treatment effect with density ratio model, Empirical likelihood tests for two-sample problems via nonparametric density estimation, Inference for the mean difference in the two-sample random censorship model, Detecting difference between coefficients in linear model using jackknife empirical likelihood, Semi-empirical likelihood inference for the ROC curve with missing data, Empirical likelihood for the contrast of two hazard functions with right censoring, Semi-parametric likelihood ratio confidence intervals for various differences of two populations, Empirical phi-divergence test statistics for the difference of means of two populations, Simultaneous confidence bands for ratios of survival functions via empirical likelihood., Empirical likelihood based inference for semiparametric varying coefficient partially linear models with error-prone linear covariates, Two-sample extended empirical likelihood, Empirical Likelihood for Outlier Detection and Estimation in Autoregressive Time Series, EMPIRICAL LIKELIHOOD-BASED INFERENCES FOR PARTIALLY LINEAR MODELS WITH MISSING COVARIATES, A mutual information-basedk-sample test for discrete distributions, Using Empirical Likelihood to Combine Data: Application to Food Risk Assessment
Cites Work