10,378 research outputs found
On the long-time behavior of spin echo and its relation to free induction decay
It is predicted that (i) spin echoes have two kinds of generic long-time
decays: either simple exponential, or a superposition of a monotonic and an
oscillatory exponential decays; and (ii) the long-time behavior of spin echo
and the long-time behavior of the corresponding homogeneous free induction
decay are characterized by the same time constants. This prediction extends to
various echo problems both within and beyond nuclear magnetic resonance.
Experimental confirmation of this prediction would also support the notion of
the eigenvalues of time evolution operators in large quantum systems.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
On asymptotically optimal tests under loss of identifiability in semiparametric models
We consider tests of hypotheses when the parameters are not identifiable
under the null in semiparametric models, where regularity conditions for
profile likelihood theory fail. Exponential average tests based on integrated
profile likelihood are constructed and shown to be asymptotically optimal under
a weighted average power criterion with respect to a prior on the
nonidentifiable aspect of the model. These results extend existing results for
parametric models, which involve more restrictive assumptions on the form of
the alternative than do our results. Moreover, the proposed tests accommodate
models with infinite dimensional nuisance parameters which either may not be
identifiable or may not be estimable at the usual parametric rate. Examples
include tests of the presence of a change-point in the Cox model with current
status data and tests of regression parameters in odds-rate models with right
censored data. Optimal tests have not previously been studied for these
scenarios. We study the asymptotic distribution of the proposed tests under the
null, fixed contiguous alternatives and random contiguous alternatives. We also
propose a weighted bootstrap procedure for computing the critical values of the
test statistics. The optimal tests perform well in simulation studies, where
they may exhibit improved power over alternative tests.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/08-AOS643 the Annals of
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Robust Inference for Univariate Proportional Hazards Frailty Regression Models
We consider a class of semiparametric regression models which are
one-parameter extensions of the Cox [J. Roy. Statist. Soc. Ser. B 34 (1972)
187-220] model for right-censored univariate failure times. These models assume
that the hazard given the covariates and a random frailty unique to each
individual has the proportional hazards form multiplied by the frailty.
The frailty is assumed to have mean 1 within a known one-parameter family of
distributions. Inference is based on a nonparametric likelihood. The behavior
of the likelihood maximizer is studied under general conditions where the
fitted model may be misspecified. The joint estimator of the regression and
frailty parameters as well as the baseline hazard is shown to be uniformly
consistent for the pseudo-value maximizing the asymptotic limit of the
likelihood. Appropriately standardized, the estimator converges weakly to a
Gaussian process. When the model is correctly specified, the procedure is
semiparametric efficient, achieving the semiparametric information bound for
all parameter components. It is also proved that the bootstrap gives valid
inferences for all parameters, even under misspecification.
We demonstrate analytically the importance of the robust inference in several
examples. In a randomized clinical trial, a valid test of the treatment effect
is possible when other prognostic factors and the frailty distribution are both
misspecified. Under certain conditions on the covariates, the ratios of the
regression parameters are still identifiable. The practical utility of the
procedure is illustrated on a non-Hodgkin's lymphoma dataset.Comment: Published by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics
(http://www.imstat.org) in the Annals of Statistics
(http://www.imstat.org/aos/) at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/00905360400000053
Typical state of an isolated quantum system with fixed energy and unrestricted participation of eigenstates
This work describes the statistics for the occupation numbers of quantum
levels in a large isolated quantum system, where all possible superpositions of
eigenstates are allowed, provided all these superpositions have the same fixed
energy. Such a condition is not equivalent to the conventional micro-canonical
condition, because the latter limits the participating eigenstates to a very
narrow energy window. The statistics is obtained analytically for both the
entire system and its small subsystem. In a significant departure from the
Boltzmann-Gibbs statistics, the average occupation numbers of quantum states
exhibit in the present case weak algebraic dependence on energy. In the
macroscopic limit, this dependence is routinely accompanied by the condensation
into the lowest energy quantum state. This work contains initial numerical
tests of the above statistics for finite systems, and also reports the
following numerical finding: When the basis states of large but finite random
matrix Hamiltonians are expanded in terms of eigenstates, the participation of
eigenstates in such an expansion obeys the newly obtained statistics. The above
statistics might be observable in small quantum systems, but for the
macroscopic systems, it rather reenforces doubts about self-sufficiency of
non-relativistic quantum mechanics for justifying the Boltzmann-Gibbs
equilibrium.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figure
Civil Procedure—Specific Exceptions to Charge Needed to Raise Points on Appeal
Lobalzo v. Varoli, 422 Pa. 5, 220 A.2d 634 (1966)
Nonparametric Bounds and Sensitivity Analysis of Treatment Effects
This paper considers conducting inference about the effect of a treatment (or
exposure) on an outcome of interest. In the ideal setting where treatment is
assigned randomly, under certain assumptions the treatment effect is
identifiable from the observable data and inference is straightforward.
However, in other settings such as observational studies or randomized trials
with noncompliance, the treatment effect is no longer identifiable without
relying on untestable assumptions. Nonetheless, the observable data often do
provide some information about the effect of treatment, that is, the parameter
of interest is partially identifiable. Two approaches are often employed in
this setting: (i) bounds are derived for the treatment effect under minimal
assumptions, or (ii) additional untestable assumptions are invoked that render
the treatment effect identifiable and then sensitivity analysis is conducted to
assess how inference about the treatment effect changes as the untestable
assumptions are varied. Approaches (i) and (ii) are considered in various
settings, including assessing principal strata effects, direct and indirect
effects and effects of time-varying exposures. Methods for drawing formal
inference about partially identified parameters are also discussed.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/14-STS499 the Statistical
Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Phase relationship between the long-time beats of free induction decays and spin echoes in solids
Recent theoretical work on the role of microscopic chaos in the dynamics and
relaxation of many-body quantum systems has made several experimentally
confirmed predictions about the systems of interacting nuclear spins in solids,
focusing, in particular, on the shapes of spin echo responses measured by
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). These predictions were based on the idea that
the transverse nuclear spin decays evolve in a manner governed at long times by
the slowest decaying eigenmode of the quantum system, analogous to a chaotic
resonance in a classical system. The present paper extends the above
investigations both theoretically and experimentally. On the theoretical side,
the notion of chaotic eigenmodes is used to make predictions about the
relationships between the long-time oscillation phase of the nuclear free
induction decay (FID) and the amplitudes and phases of spin echoes. On the
experimental side, the above predictions are tested for the nuclear spin decays
of F-19 in CaF2 crystals and Xe-129 in frozen xenon. Good agreement between the
theory and the experiment is found.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, significant new experimental content in
comparison with version
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