On sufficient dimension reduction with missing responses through estimating equations
DOI10.1016/j.csda.2018.04.006zbMath1469.62056OpenAlexW2800633615MaRDI QIDQ1663089
Yuexiao Dong, Zeda Li, Cheng Yong Tang, Qi Xia
Publication date: 21 August 2018
Published in: Computational Statistics and Data Analysis (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.csda.2018.04.006
missing at randominverse probability weightingcomplete-case analysiskernel inverse regressionlinear conditional mean
Computational methods for problems pertaining to statistics (62-08) Nonparametric regression and quantile regression (62G08) Estimation in multivariate analysis (62H12) Missing data (62D10)
Related Items (3)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Direction estimation in the single-index model with missing values
- Empirical likelihood for estimating equations with missing values
- Dimension reduction for nonelliptically distributed predictors
- Dimension reduction with missing response at random
- Asymptotics for kernel estimate of sliced inverse regression
- Semiparametric efficiency in GMM models with auxiliary data
- Estimating the Structural Dimension of Regressions Via Parametric Inverse Regression
- Estimating Equations Inference With Missing Data
- Fusion-Refinement Procedure for Dimension Reduction With Missing Response at Random
- An efficient empirical likelihood approach for estimating equations with missing data
- Dimension reduction for non-elliptically distributed predictors: second-order methods
- On Directional Regression for Dimension Reduction
- Sufficient Dimension Reduction With Missing Predictors
- Sliced Inverse Regression for Dimension Reduction
- Estimation of Regression Coefficients When Some Regressors Are Not Always Observed
- A Semiparametric Approach to Dimension Reduction
- A validated information criterion to determine the structural dimension in dimension reduction models
This page was built for publication: On sufficient dimension reduction with missing responses through estimating equations