EFDR
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Wavelet-Based Enhanced FDR for Detecting Signals from Complete or Incomplete Spatially Aggregated Data
Andrew Zammit-Mangion, Hsin-Cheng Huang
Last update: 22 August 2023
Copyright license: GNU General Public License, version 3.0, GNU General Public License, version 2.0
Software version identifier: 1.2, 0.1.0, 0.1.1, 1.0, 1.3
Source code repository: https://github.com/cran/EFDR
Enhanced False Discovery Rate (EFDR) is a tool to detect anomalies in an image. The image is first transformed into the wavelet domain in order to decorrelate any noise components, following which the coefficients at each resolution are standardised. Statistical tests (in a multiple hypothesis testing setting) are then carried out to find the anomalies. The power of EFDR exceeds that of standard FDR, which would carry out tests on every wavelet coefficient: EFDR choose which wavelets to test based on a criterion described in Shen et al. (2002). The package also provides elementary tools to interpolate spatially irregular data onto a grid of the required size. The work is based on Shen, X., Huang, H.-C., and Cressie, N. 'Nonparametric hypothesis testing for a spatial signal.' Journal of the American Statistical Association 97.460 (2002): 1122-1140.
Cited In (11)
- Wavelet-based bootstrapping of spatial patterns on a finite lattice
- Noise reduction for enhanced component identification in multi-dimensional biomolecular NMR studies
- Optimal change point detection in Gaussian processes
- Estimating and testing zones of abrupt change for spatial data
- Detection of an anomalous cluster in a network
- False Discovery Rates to Detect Signals from Incomplete Spatially Aggregated Data
- Detection of Local Differences in Spatial Characteristics Between Two Spatiotemporal Random Fields
- Statistical inference and visualization in scale-space for spatially dependent images
- Wavelet-based Benjamini-Hochberg procedures for multiple testing under dependence
- Testing and estimation for clustered signals
- MICE: Multiple‐Peak Identification, Characterization, and Estimation
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