ISO\(^*\) property of two-parameter compound Poisson distributions with applications
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1840781
DOI10.1006/jmva.2000.1904zbMath0967.60007OpenAlexW1969834316MaRDI QIDQ1840781
Publication date: 30 August 2001
Published in: Journal of Multivariate Analysis (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1006/jmva.2000.1904
stochastic orderingSchur convexnoncentral chi-square distributionnoncentrality parameterISO*order-restricted hypothesis testing problemtwo-parameter family
Multivariate analysis (62H99) Inequalities; stochastic orderings (60E15) Parametric hypothesis testing (62F03) Geometric probability and stochastic geometry (60D05)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- On measuring the conformity of a parameter set to a trend, with applications
- A complete class theorem for estimating a noncentrality parameter
- Inequalities for multivariate infinitely divisible processes
- Inequalities for multivariate compound Poisson distributions
- Decreasing in transposition property of overlapping sums, and applications
- Estimation of the non-centrality parameter of a chi squared distribution
- Combining independent chi squared or F tests
- Schur functions in statistics. I: The preservation theorem
- Cone order association and stochastic cone ordering with applications to order-restricted testing
- Inequalities for the probability content of a rotated ellipse and related stochastic domination results
- Tolerance regions and multiple-use confidence regions in multivariate calibration
- Parametric Schur convexity and arrangement monotonicity properties of partial sums
- Constructing tests for normal order-restricted inference
- Order-preserving functions; applications to majorization and order statistics
- A stochastic ordering of partial sums of independent random variables and of some random processes
- Some remarks on estimating a noncentrality parameter
- The Maximum Likelihood Estimate of the Non-Centrality Parameter of a Non-Central χ 2 Variate
- Inequalities: theory of majorization and its applications