Generalized estimating equations for mixtures with varying concentrations
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2851564
DOI10.1002/cjs.11170zbMath1273.62071MaRDI QIDQ2851564
Olena Sugakova, Alexey Doronin, Rostislav E. Maiboroda
Publication date: 11 October 2013
Published in: Canadian Journal of Statistics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/cjs.11170
asymptotic normality; finite mixture models; semi-parametric estimation; statistical analysis of voting results
62G20: Asymptotic properties of nonparametric inference
62G05: Nonparametric estimation
62P25: Applications of statistics to social sciences
62G30: Order statistics; empirical distribution functions
Related Items
Linear regression by observations from mixture with varying concentrations, Testing hypotheses on moments by observations from a mixture with varying concentrations, Confidence ellipsoids for regression coefficients by observations from a mixture, Principal components analysis for mixtures with varying concentrations, Jackknife for nonlinear estimating equations, Asymptotic normality of modified LS estimator for mixture of nonlinear regressions, Adaptive estimation for a semiparametric model of mixture, Lower bound for a dispersion matrix for the semiparametric estimation in a model of mixtures
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Nonparametric density estimation for symmetric distributions by contaminated data
- Inference for mixtures of symmetric distributions
- Quasi-likelihood and its application. A general approach to optimal parameter estimation
- Nonparametric estimation of component distributions in a multivariate mixture
- Semiparametric estimation of a two-component mixture model
- Statistics of mixtures with varying concentrations with application to DNA microarray data analysis
- Test on components of mixture densities
- Estimation of mean positions and concentrations from observations of a two-component mixture of symmetric distributions
- Semiparametric Estimation of a Two‐component Mixture Model where One Component is known