Testing whether failure rate changes its trend with unknown change points
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1765670
DOI10.1016/j.jspi.2004.06.055zbMath1058.62089OpenAlexW2047980819MaRDI QIDQ1765670
Jongwoo Jeon, Myung Hwan Na, Dong Ho Park
Publication date: 23 February 2005
Published in: Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jspi.2004.06.055
Related Items (13)
On testing whether burn-in is required under the long-run average cost ⋮ On the exact distribution of generalized Hollander-Proschan type statistics ⋮ Inference on a Sharp Jump in Hazard Rate: A Review ⋮ A review of tests for exponentiality with Monte Carlo comparisons ⋮ Testing exponentiality against a trend change in mean time to failure in age replacement ⋮ Modified information approach for detecting change points in piecewise linear failure rate function ⋮ On a non-monotonic ageing class based on the failure rate average ⋮ Likelihood ratio tests for continuous monotone hazards with an unknown change point ⋮ Likelihood ratio test for a piecewise continuous Weibull model with an unknown change point ⋮ A Hollander-Proschan type test when ageing is not monotone ⋮ Tests of non-monotonic stochastic aging notions in reliability theory ⋮ Detecting trend change in hazard functions -- an \(L\)-statistic approach ⋮ A Test for an Abrupt Change in Weibull Hazard Functions with Staggered Entry and Type I Censoring
Cites Work
- Asymptotic score-statistic processes and tests for constant hazard against a change-point alternative
- A note on differentials and the CLT and LIL for statistical functions, with application to M-estimates
- How to Identify a Bathtub Hazard Rate
- The first-passage density of a continuous gaussian process to a general boundary
- Testing whether failure rate changes its trend
- A Reliability Distribution with Increasing, Decreasing, Constant and Bathtub-Shaped Failure Rates
- Exponentiated Weibull family for analyzing bathtub failure-rate data
- On the Asymptotic Distribution of Differentiable Statistical Functions
This page was built for publication: Testing whether failure rate changes its trend with unknown change points