Finite mixtures of unimodal beta and gamma densities and the \(k\)-bumps algorithm
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2259082
DOI10.1007/s00180-012-0367-4zbMath1306.65024OpenAlexW2023163585MaRDI QIDQ2259082
Publication date: 27 February 2015
Published in: Computational Statistics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00180-012-0367-4
Related Items (30)
Multilevel cluster-weighted models for the evaluation of hospitals ⋮ Fitting insurance and economic data with outliers: a flexible approach based on finite mixtures of contaminated gamma distributions ⋮ A new look at the inverse Gaussian distribution with applications to insurance and economic data ⋮ Model-based clustering via linear cluster-weighted models ⋮ Finite mixture of Birnbaum-Saunders distributions using the \(k\)-bumps algorithm ⋮ Clustering bivariate mixed-type data via the cluster-weighted model ⋮ Model-based time-varying clustering of multivariate longitudinal data with covariates and outliers ⋮ Modeling the cryptocurrency return distribution via Laplace scale mixtures ⋮ Erratum to: The Generalized Linear Mixed Cluster-Weighted Model ⋮ Compound unimodal distributions for insurance losses ⋮ Robust clustering in regression analysis via the contaminated Gaussian cluster-weighted model ⋮ Clustering student skill set profiles in a unit hypercube using mixtures of multivariate betas ⋮ Modeling right-skewed financial data streams: a likelihood inference based on the generalized Birnbaum-Saunders mixture model ⋮ The arcsine exponentiated-\(X\) family: validation and insurance application ⋮ Multiple scaled contaminated normal distribution and its application in clustering ⋮ Asymmetric clusters and outliers: mixtures of multivariate contaminated shifted asymmetric Laplace distributions ⋮ Estimation for finite mixture of simplex models: applications to biomedical data ⋮ Cluster Weighted Beta Regression: A Simulation Study ⋮ On generalized log-Moyal distribution: a new heavy tailed size distribution ⋮ A new lifetime exponential-\(X\) family of distributions with applications to reliability data ⋮ Asymptotic properties of Bernstein estimators on the simplex ⋮ Bivariate discrete beta kernel graduation of mortality data ⋮ Flexible mixture modelling with the polynomial Gaussian cluster-weighted model ⋮ Hypothesis Testing for Mixture Model Selection ⋮ Mixtures of multivariate contaminated normal regression models ⋮ A new regression model for positive random variables with skewed and long tail ⋮ Parsimonious mixtures of multivariate contaminated normal distributions ⋮ Cluster validation for mixtures of regressions via the total sum of squares decomposition ⋮ Modelling insurance losses using a new beta power transformed family of distributions ⋮ The generalized linear mixed cluster-weighted model
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Beta kernel estimators for density functions
- Classification and data mining.
- Choosing starting values for the EM algorithm for getting the highest likelihood in multivariate Gaussian mixture models
- Convergence rates for density estimation with Bernstein polynomials.
- Discrete approximations of continuous and mixed measures on a compact interval
- The topography of multivariate normal mixtures
- A classification EM algorithm for clustering and two stochastic versions
- Multiobjective Genetic Algorithms for Clustering
- Mixture Densities, Maximum Likelihood and the EM Algorithm
- Modern Multivariate Statistical Techniques
- Statistical analysis of finite mixture distributions
- Finding Groups in Data
- Bayesian density estimation using bernstein polynomials
- Finite mixture models
- Random Bernstein Polynomials
- Systems of Frequency Curves
- On the Modes of a Mixture of Two Normal Distributions
- Probability density function estimation using gamma kernels
- An experimental comparison of model-based clustering methods
This page was built for publication: Finite mixtures of unimodal beta and gamma densities and the \(k\)-bumps algorithm