Empirical likelihood inference for a common mean in the presence of heteroscedasticity
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5476450
DOI10.1002/cjs.5550340105zbMath1096.62020OpenAlexW2116692750MaRDI QIDQ5476450
Publication date: 14 July 2006
Published in: Canadian Journal of Statistics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/cjs.5550340105
confidence intervalsheteroscedasticityindependent samplescombining informationweighted empirical likelihood
Asymptotic properties of parametric estimators (62F12) Parametric tolerance and confidence regions (62F25) Sampling theory, sample surveys (62D05)
Related Items
Non-linear fusion of observations provided by two sensors ⋮ Empirical phi-divergence test statistics for the difference of means of two populations ⋮ Semiparametric inference on the means of multiple nonnegative distributions with excess zero observations ⋮ Weighted empirical likelihood inference for multiple samples ⋮ Using Empirical Likelihood to Combine Data: Application to Food Risk Assessment ⋮ Clustering of subsample means based on pairwise L1 regularized empirical likelihood ⋮ Mann–Whitney test with empirical likelihood methods for pretest–posttest studies ⋮ Semiparametric empirical likelihood inference with estimating equations under density ratio models
Cites Work
- Weighted empirical likelihood inference.
- Estimation of the common mean of a bivariate normal population
- Bounds on coverage probabilities of the empirical likelihood ratio confidence regions.
- Empirical likelihood inference in the presence of measurement error
- Empirical likelihood ratio confidence intervals for a single functional
- Estimating the Common Mean of Possibly Different Normal Populations: A Simulation Study
- Using empirical likelihood methods to obtain range restricted weights in regression estimators for surveys
- Combining information from multiple surveys through the empirical likelihood method
- Estimation for Linear Models with Unequal Variances
- Consistent Estimates Based on Partially Consistent Observations