Can Bayesian, confidence distribution and frequentist inference agree?
DOI10.1007/s10260-020-00520-yzbMath1478.62012OpenAlexW3015568337MaRDI QIDQ2665011
Publication date: 18 November 2021
Published in: Statistical Methods and Applications (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10260-020-00520-y
first-order theory\(p\)-valuelikelihood inferencepivotal quantitymarginal posterior distributionmatching priorcredible intervalhigher-order asymptoticsfull Bayesian significance testtail area probabilityprecise null hypothesis
Nonparametric hypothesis testing (62G10) Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis (62P10) Foundations and philosophical topics in statistics (62A01) Nonparametric tolerance and confidence regions (62G15)
Related Items
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Marginal posterior simulation via higher-order tail area approximations
- Bayesian evidence test for precise hypotheses
- Asymptotics and the theory of inference
- Strong matching of frequentist and Bayesian parametric inference
- Evidence and credibility: Full Bayesian signifiance test for precise hypotheses
- When should modes of inference disagree? Some simple but challenging examples
- Confidence distributions and related themes
- Confidence distributions: a review
- An explicit large-deviation approximation to one-parameter tests.
- On the Bayesianity of Pereira-Stern tests
- Objective Bayesian higher-order asymptotics in models with nuisance parameters
- Approximate Bayesian computation with modified log-likelihood ratios
- Likelihood Asymptotics
- Pseudo-Likelihoods for Bayesian Inference
- Higher order inference for the consensus mean in inter-laboratory studies
- Confidence, Likelihood, Probability
- Confidence Limits for Stress-Strength Models with Explanatory Variables
- Bayes Factors
- Confidence Distribution, the Frequentist Distribution Estimator of a Parameter: A Review
- Higher order asymptotic computation of Bayesian significance tests for precise null hypotheses in the presence of nuisance parameters
- Fiducial and Confidence Distributions for Real Exponential Families
- Mean loglikelihood and higher-order approximations
- Applied Asymptotics
- Can a significance test be genuinely Bayesian?
- Modern Likelihood‐Frequentist Inference
- RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN BAYESIAN AND FREQUENTIST SIGNIFICANCE INDICES