Tests for generalized exponential laws based on the empirical Mellin transform
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3615029
DOI10.1080/00949650701525822zbMath1169.62309OpenAlexW2095730748MaRDI QIDQ3615029
No author found.
Publication date: 17 March 2009
Published in: Journal of Statistical Computation and Simulation (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/00949650701525822
Parametric hypothesis testing (62F03) Point estimation (62F10) Exact distribution theory in statistics (62E15) Bootstrap, jackknife and other resampling methods (62F40) Monte Carlo methods (65C05)
Related Items
New L2-type exponentiality tests ⋮ Testing exponentiality based on characterizations of the exponential distribution ⋮ The limit distribution of weighted \(L^2\)-goodness-of-fit statistics under fixed alternatives, with applications ⋮ The empirical moment process in testing for the generalized two-sided power distribution ⋮ The exponentiated exponential distribution: a survey ⋮ Goodness-of-Fit Tests Based on Correcting Moments of Entropy Estimators ⋮ General treatment of goodness-of-fit tests based on Kullback–Leibler information ⋮ New consistent exponentiality tests based on V-empirical Laplace transforms with comparison of efficiencies
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Tests for location-scale families based on the empirical characteristic function
- Empirical characteristic function approach to goodness-of-fit tests for the Cauchy distribution with parameters estimated by MLE or EISE
- Using the empirical moment generating function in testing for the Weibull and the type I extreme value distributions
- Goodness-of-fit tests based on estimated expectations of probability integral transformed order statistics
- Change point analysis based on empirical characteristic functions
- GENERALIZATION OF GMM TO A CONTINUUM OF MOMENT CONDITIONS
- Exponentiated Exponential Family: An Alternative to Gamma and Weibull Distributions
- Generalized exponential distribution: different method of estimations
- Generalized exponential distributions