Publication | Closed Access
Nonparametric Estimation of a Distribution Subject to a Stochastic Precedence Constraint
70
Citations
33
References
2002
Year
Large DeviationsEngineeringStochastic AnalysisStochastic SimulationUncertainty QuantificationStochastic ProcessesDistribution SubjectBiostatisticsBayesian MethodsPublic HealthEstimation TheoryStatisticsData ShrinkageDensity EstimationSp ConstraintEstimation StatisticProbability TheoryNonparametric EstimationStochastic Precedence ConstraintStochastic OptimizationNew EstimatorsStatistical InferenceSemi-nonparametric Estimation
AbstractFor any two random variables X and Y with distributions F and G defined on [0,∞), X is said to stochastically precede Y if P(X≤Y) ≥ 1/2. For independent X and Y, stochastic precedence (denoted by X≤spY) is equivalent to E[G(X–)] ≤ 1/2. The applicability of stochastic precedence in various statistical contexts, including reliability modeling, tests for distributional equality versus various alternatives, and the relative performance of comparable tolerance bounds, is discussed. The problem of estimating the underlying distribution(s) of experimental data under the assumption that they obey a stochastic precedence (sp) constraint is treated in detail. Two estimation approaches, one based on data shrinkage and the other involving data translation, are used to construct estimators that conform to the sp constraint, and each is shown to lead to a root n-consistent estimator of the underlying distribution. The asymptotic behavior of each of the estimators is fully characterized. Conditions are given under which each estimator is asymptotically equivalent to the corresponding empirical distribution function or, in the case of right censoring, the Kaplan–Meier estimator. In the complementary cases, evidence is presented, both analytically and via simulation, demonstrating that the new estimators tend to outperform the empirical distribution function when sample sizes are sufficiently large.KEY WORDS: Empirical processOrder statisticsReliabilityStochastic orderU–statistics
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