4,234 research outputs found

    Extreme-Value Copulas

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    Being the limits of copulas of componentwise maxima in independent random samples, extreme-value copulas can be considered to provide appropriate models for the dependence structure between rare events. Extreme-value copulas not only arise naturally in the domain of extreme-value theory, they can also be a convenient choice to model general positive dependence structures. The aim of this survey is to present the reader with the state-of-the-art in dependence modeling via extreme-value copulas. Both probabilistic and statistical issues are reviewed, in a nonparametric as well as a parametric context.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figures. Minor revision, typos corrected. To appear in F. Durante, W. Haerdle, P. Jaworski, and T. Rychlik (editors) "Workshop on Copula Theory and its Applications", Lecture Notes in Statistics -- Proceedings, Springer 201

    Generalized Hoeffding-Sobol Decomposition for Dependent Variables -Application to Sensitivity Analysis

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    In this paper, we consider a regression model built on dependent variables. This regression modelizes an input output relationship. Under boundedness assumptions on the joint distribution function of the input variables, we show that a generalized Hoeffding-Sobol decomposition is available. This leads to new indices measuring the sensitivity of the output with respect to the input variables. We also study and discuss the estimation of these new indices

    Modeling the Differences in Counted Outcomes using Bivariate Copula Models: with Application to Mismeasured Counts

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    This paper makes three contributions. First, it uses copula functions to obtain a flexible bivariate parametric model for nonnegative integer-valued data (counts). Second, it recovers the distribution of the difference in the two counts from a specifed bivariate count distribution. Third, the methods are applied to counts that are measured with error. Specifically we model the determinants of the difference between the self-reported number of doctor visits (measured with error) and true number of doctor visits (also available in the data used).
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