How Many Observations Fall in a Neighborhood of an Order Statistic?

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Publication:3593509

DOI10.1080/03610920601041523zbMath1135.62036OpenAlexW2018139026MaRDI QIDQ3593509

Anna Dembińska, Jacek Wesołowski, Alexei Stepanov

Publication date: 23 July 2007

Published in: Communications in Statistics - Theory and Methods (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/03610920601041523




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Asymptotic behaviour of proportions of observations in random regions determined by central order statistics from stationary processesAsymptotic properties of numbers of observations near sample quantilesNumbers of near-maxima for the bivariate caseAsymptotic normality of numbers of observations near order statistics from stationary processesAsymptotic behavior of proportions of observations falling to random regions determined by central order statisticsLimit theorems for runs based on `small spacings'Characterization and goodness-of-fit test of Pareto and some related distributions based on near-order statisticsOn numbers of observations in random regions determined by recordsOn the asymptotics of numbers of observations in random regions determined by order statisticsAsymptotic properties of numbers of observations in random regions determined by central order statisticsAsymptotic behaviour of near-maxima of Gaussian sequencesOn the asymptotic independence of numbers of observations near order statisticsAsymptotic properties of numbers of near minimum observations under progressive type-II censoringAsymptotic properties of the ratio of order statisticsAn ergodic theorem for proportions of observations that fall into random sets determined by sample quantilesOn numbers of observations near randomly indexed order statisticsThe long-term behavior of number of near-maximum insurance claimsLIMIT THEOREMS FOR PROPORTIONS OF OBSERVATIONS FALLING INTO RANDOM REGIONS DETERMINED BY ORDER STATISTICSThe asymptotic distribution of numbers of observations near order statisticsLimit results for concomitants of order statisticsSpacings around an order statisticCharacterizations based on the numbers of near-order statistics




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