396 research outputs found

    Wavelet block thresholding for samples with random design: a minimax approach under the LpL^p risk

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    We consider the regression model with (known) random design. We investigate the minimax performances of an adaptive wavelet block thresholding estimator under the Lp\mathbb{L}^p risk with p2p\ge 2 over Besov balls. We prove that it is near optimal and that it achieves better rates of convergence than the conventional term-by-term estimators (hard, soft,...).Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/07-EJS067 in the Electronic Journal of Statistics (http://www.i-journals.org/ejs/) by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org

    Adapting to Unknown Smoothness by Aggregation of Thresholded Wavelet Estimators

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    We study the performances of an adaptive procedure based on a convex combination, with data-driven weights, of term-by-term thresholded wavelet estimators. For the bounded regression model, with random uniform design, and the nonparametric density model, we show that the resulting estimator is optimal in the minimax sense over all Besov balls under the L2L^2 risk, without any logarithm factor

    Wavelet Estimation Via Block Thresholding : A Minimax Study Under The LpL^p Risk

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    19 pagesWe investigate the asymptotic minimax properties of an adaptive wavelet block thresholding estimator under the Lp{L}^p risk over Besov balls. It can be viewed as a Lp\mathbb{L}^p version of the BlockShrink estimator developed by Cai (1996,1997,2002). Firstly, we show that it is (near) optimal for numerous statistical models, including certain inverse problems. Under this statistical context, it achieves better rates of convergence than the hard thresholding estimator introduced by Donoho and Johnstone (1995). Secondly, we apply this general result to a deconvolution problem

    A maxiset approach of a Gaussian noise model

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    We consider the problem of estimating an unknown function ff in a homoscedastic Gaussian white noise setting under Lp\mathbb{L}^p risk. The particularity of this model is that it has an intermediate function, say vv, which complicates the estimate significantly. While varying the assumptions on vv, we investigate the minimax rate of convergence over two balls of spaces which belong to family of Besov classes. One is defined as usual and the other called 'weighted Besov balls' used vv explicitly. Adopting the maxiset approach, we develop a natural hard thresholding procedure which attained the minimax rate of convergence within a logarithmic factor over these weighted balls

    A maxiset approach of a Gaussian white noise model

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    This paper is devoted to the estimation of an unknown function ff in the framework of a Gaussian white noise model. The noise process is represented by t1n0tg(x)dBxt\rightarrow\frac{1}{\sqrt{n}}\int_{0}^{t}g(x) dB_x, where the variance function gg is assumed to be known. Adopting the maxiset point of view, we study the performance of two different hard thresholding estimators in Lp\mathbb{L}^p norm. In a first part, we expand ff on a compactly supported wavelet basis {ψλ(.); λΛ}\{\psi_{\lambda}(.); \ \lambda\in\Lambda\}. From this decomposition, we use some results about the heteroscedastic white noise model to construct a well adapted hard thresholding estimator and to exhibit the associated maxiset. In a second part, we introduce the classes of Muckenhoupt weights and we use this analytical tools to investigate the geometrical properties of warped wavelet basis {ψλ(T(.)); λΛ}\{\psi_{\lambda}(T(.)); \ \lambda\in\Lambda\} in Lp\mathbb{L}^p norm. Expanding ff on such a basis and considering the associated hard thresholding estimator, we investigate the maxiset properties under some assumptions on gg. We finally apply this result to find an upper bound over weighted Besov spaces

    Block thresholding for wavelet-based estimation of function derivatives from a heteroscedastic multichannel convolution model

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    We observe nn heteroscedastic stochastic processes {Yv(t)}v\{Y_v(t)\}_{v}, where for any v{1,,n}v\in\{1,\ldots,n\} and t[0,1]t \in [0,1], Yv(t)Y_v(t) is the convolution product of an unknown function ff and a known blurring function gvg_v corrupted by Gaussian noise. Under an ordinary smoothness assumption on g1,,gng_1,\ldots,g_n, our goal is to estimate the dd-th derivatives (in weak sense) of ff from the observations. We propose an adaptive estimator based on wavelet block thresholding, namely the "BlockJS estimator". Taking the mean integrated squared error (MISE), our main theoretical result investigates the minimax rates over Besov smoothness spaces, and shows that our block estimator can achieve the optimal minimax rate, or is at least nearly-minimax in the least favorable situation. We also report a comprehensive suite of numerical simulations to support our theoretical findings. The practical performance of our block estimator compares very favorably to existing methods of the literature on a large set of test functions

    A New Sine-G Family of Distributions: Properties and Applications

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    This paper is devoted to the study of a new family of distributions based on a sine transformation. In some situations, we show that the new family provides a suitable alternative to the so-called sine-G family of distributions, with the same number of parameters. Among others, some of its significant mathematical properties are derived, including shapes of probability density and hazard rate functions, asymptotes, quantile function, useful expansions, moments and moment generating function. Then, a special member with two parameters, using the inverse Weibull distribution as baseline, is introduced and investigated in detail. By considering this new distribution as a statistical model, the parameters are estimated via the maximum likelihood method. A simulation study is carried out to assess the performance of the obtained estimators. The applications on two real data sets are explored, showing the ability of the proposed model to fit various type of data sets

    Numerical performances of a warped wavelet estimation procedure for regression in random design

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    The purpose of this paper is to investigate the numerical performances of the hard thresholding procedure introduced by Kerkyacharian and Picard (2004) for the non-parametric regression model with random design. That construction adopts a new approach by using a wavelet basis warped with a function depending on the design, which enables to estimate regression functions under mild assumptions on the design. We compare our numerical properties to those obtained for other constructions based on hard wavelet thresholding. The performances are evaluated on numerous simulated data sets covering a broad variety of settings including known and unknown design density models, and also on real data sets

    On adaptive wavelet estimation of a class of weighted densities

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    We investigate the estimation of a weighted density taking the form g=w(F)fg=w(F)f, where ff denotes an unknown density, FF the associated distribution function and ww is a known (non-negative) weight. Such a class encompasses many examples, including those arising in order statistics or when gg is related to the maximum or the minimum of NN (random or fixed) independent and identically distributed (\iid) random variables. We here construct a new adaptive non-parametric estimator for gg based on a plug-in approach and the wavelets methodology. For a wide class of models, we prove that it attains fast rates of convergence under the Lp\mathbb{L}_p risk with p1p\ge 1 (not only for p=2p = 2 corresponding to the mean integrated squared error) over Besov balls. The theoretical findings are illustrated through several simulations

    On the unit Burr-XII distribution with the quantile regression modeling and applications

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    In this paper, we modify the Burr-XII distribution through the inverse exponential scheme to obtain a new two-parameter distribution on the unit interval called the unit Burr-XII distribution. The basic statistical properties of the newly defined distribution are studied. Parameters estimation is dealt and different estimation methods are assessed through two simulation studies. A new quantile regression model based on the proposed distribution is introduced. Applications of the proposed distribution and its regression model to real data sets show that the proposed models have better modeling capabilities than competing models
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