A multiple filter test for the detection of rate changes in renewal processes with varying variance
DOI10.1214/14-aoas782zbMath1454.62365arXiv1303.3594OpenAlexW1996929130MaRDI QIDQ146393
Marietta Kirchner, Ralph Neininger, Michael Messer, Gaby Schneider, Jochen Roeper, Julia Schiemann, Michael Messer, Gaby Schneider, Marietta Kirchner, Jochen Roeper, Julia Schiemann, Ralph Neininger
Publication date: 1 December 2014
Published in: The Annals of Applied Statistics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1303.3594
stochastic processesrenewal processesmultiple time scaleschange point detectionmultiple filtersnonstationary rate
Time series, auto-correlation, regression, etc. in statistics (GARCH) (62M10) Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis (62P10)
Related Items (12)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- A multiple filter test for the detection of rate changes in renewal processes with varying variance
- On a weighted embedding for pontograms
- Effect of cross-trial nonstationarity on joint-spike events
- On extreme value asymptotics for increments of renewal processes
- Unitary Events in Multiple Single-Neuron Spiking Activity: II. Nonstationary Data
- Off-Line Detection of Multiple Change Points by the Filtered Derivative withp-Value Method
- A Brief Survey of Bandwidth Selection for Density Estimation
- Minimax Methods for Multihypothesis Sequential Testing and Change-Point Detection Problems
- Can Spike Coordination Be Differentiated from Rate Covariation?
- A Method for Selecting the Bin Size of a Time Histogram
- Asymptotic distributions of pontograms
- Alignments in two-dimensional random sets of points
- A local method for estimating change points: the “Hat-function”
- A Universal Model for Spike-Frequency Adaptation
- Messages of Oscillatory Correlograms: A Spike Train Model
- Convergence of stochastic processes
This page was built for publication: A multiple filter test for the detection of rate changes in renewal processes with varying variance