Empirical likelihood confidence bands for distribution functions with missing responses
DOI10.1016/J.JSPI.2010.03.044zbMath1188.62148OpenAlexW2035000108MaRDI QIDQ974524
Publication date: 3 June 2010
Published in: Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jspi.2010.03.044
Nonparametric regression and quantile regression (62G08) Density estimation (62G07) Asymptotic distribution theory in statistics (62E20) Asymptotic properties of nonparametric inference (62G20) Nonparametric estimation (62G05) Central limit and other weak theorems (60F05) Nonparametric tolerance and confidence regions (62G15)
Related Items (13)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- On the Glivenko-Cantelli theorem for weighted empiricals based on independent random variables
- Empirical likelihood-based inference under imputation for missing response data
- Methodology and Algorithms of Empirical Likelihood
- Empirical likelihood ratio confidence intervals for a single functional
- On the Strong Law of Large Numbers and Related Results for Quasi-Stationary Sequences
- Confidence Interval Estimation of Survival Probabilities for Censored Data
- Nonparametric Estimation of Mean Functionals with Data Missing at Random
- Estimation of Regression Coefficients When Some Regressors Are Not Always Observed
- Regression Analysis with Missing Covariate Data Using Estimating Equations
- Empirical Likelihood-based Inference in Linear Models with Missing Data
- Efficient Estimation of Population-Level Summaries in General Semiparametric Regression Models
- Semiparametric Regression Analysis With Missing Response at Random
- A Generalization of Sampling Without Replacement From a Finite Universe
- Convergence of stochastic processes
- The bootstrap and Edgeworth expansion
- Statistical models based on counting processes
This page was built for publication: Empirical likelihood confidence bands for distribution functions with missing responses