Distributed Inference for Spatial Extremes Modeling in High Dimensions
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6567924
DOI10.1080/01621459.2023.2186886MaRDI QIDQ6567924FDOQ6567924
Authors: Emily C. Hector, Brian J. Reich
Publication date: 5 July 2024
Published in: Journal of the American Statistical Association (Search for Journal in Brave)
Cites Work
- An introduction to statistical modeling of extreme values
- Large Sample Properties of Generalized Method of Moments Estimators
- A case study competition among methods for analyzing large spatial data
- Likelihood estimators for multivariate extremes
- Modelling multivariate extreme value distributions
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Statistics for near independence in multivariate extreme values
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Likelihood-based inference for max-stable processes
- Stationary max-stable fields associated to negative definite functions
- A spectral representation for max-stable processes
- Models for stationary max-stable random fields
- On spatial extremes: with application to a rainfall problem
- On the likelihood function of Gaussian max-stable processes
- Efficient inference and simulation for elliptical Pareto processes
- Extremal \(t\) processes: elliptical domain of attraction and a spectral representation
- Markov chain models for threshold exceedances
- Space–Time Modelling of Extreme Events
- Efficient inference for spatial extreme value processes associated to log-Gaussian random functions
- Composite likelihood estimation for the Brown-Resnick process
- Statistical modeling of spatial extremes
- Non-stationary dependence structures for spatial extremes
- Geostatistics of extremes
- Extreme values of independent stochastic processes
- The Multivariate Gaussian Tail Model: An Application to Oceanographic Data
- Consistent Moment Selection Procedures for Generalized Method of Moments Estimation
- Local Likelihood Smoothing of Sample Extremes
- Nonlinear and stochastic climate dynamics
- Local Likelihood Estimation of Complex Tail Dependence Structures, Applied to U.S. Precipitation Extremes
- A distributed and integrated method of moments for high-dimensional correlated data analysis
- Flexible and Fast Spatial Return Level Estimation Via a Spatially Fused Penalty
- Toward optimal fingerprinting in detection and attribution of changes in climate extremes
- Full likelihood inference for max-stable data
- Advances in statistical modeling of spatial extremes
This page was built for publication: Distributed Inference for Spatial Extremes Modeling in High Dimensions
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q6567924)