20 research outputs found
The characteristic function of the discrete Cauchy distribution
A new family of integer-valued Cauchy-type distributions is introduced, the
{\it Cauchy-Cacoullos family}. The characteristic function is evaluated,
showing some interesting distributional properties, similar to the ordinary
(continuous) Cauchy scale family. The results are extendable to discrete
Student-type distributions with odd degrees of freedom.
Keywords: Fourier series; discrete Student distribution; Cauchy-Cacoullos
family.Comment: Dedicated to Professor Theo Cacoullos (13 pages, 1 Figure
Self-Inverse and Exchangeable Random Variables
A random variable Z will be called self-inverse if it has the same
distribution as its reciprocal 1/Z. It is shown that if Z is defined as a
ratio, X/Y, of two rv's X and Y (with Pr[X=0]=Pr[Y=0]=0), then Z is
self-inverse if and only if X and Y are (or can be chosen to be) exchangeable.
In general, however, there may not exist iid X and Y in the ratio
representation of Z.Comment: Statistics and Probability Letters (to appear, 6 pages
Linear Estimation of Location and Scale Parameters Using Partial Maxima
Consider an i.i.d. sample X^*_1,X^*_2,...,X^*_n from a location-scale family,
and assume that the only available observations consist of the partial maxima
(or minima)sequence, X^*_{1:1},X^*_{2:2},...,X^*_{n:n}, where
X^*_{j:j}=max{X^*_1,...,X^*_j}. This kind of truncation appears in several
circumstances, including best performances in athletics events. In the case of
partial maxima, the form of the BLUEs (best linear unbiased estimators) is
quite similar to the form of the well-known Lloyd's (1952, Least-squares
estimation of location and scale parameters using order statistics, Biometrika,
vol. 39, pp. 88-95) BLUEs, based on (the sufficient sample of) order
statistics, but, in contrast to the classical case, their consistency is no
longer obvious. The present paper is mainly concerned with the scale parameter,
showing that the variance of the partial maxima BLUE is at most of order
O(1/log n), for a wide class of distributions.Comment: This article is devoted to the memory of my six-years-old, little
daughter, Dionyssia, who leaved us on August 25, 2010, at Cephalonia isl. (26
pages, to appear in Metrika
On the inversion of the Laplace transform (In Memory of Dimitris Gatzouras)
The Laplace transform is a useful and powerful analytic tool with
applications to several areas of applied mathematics, including differential
equations, probability and statistics. Similarly to the inversion of the
Fourier transform, inversion formulae for the Laplace transform are of central
importance; such formulae are old and well-known (Fourier-Mellin or Bromwich
integral, Post-Widder inversion). The present work is motivated from an
elementary statistical problem, namely, the unbiased estimation of a parametric
function of the scale in the basic model of a random sample from exponential
distribution. The form of the uniformly minimum variance unbiased estimator of
a parametric function , as well as its variance, are obtained as
series in Laguerre polynomials and the corresponding Fourier coefficients, and
a particular application of this result yields a novel inversion formula for
the Laplace transform.
MSC: Primary 44A10, 62F10.
Key words and phrases: Exponential Distribution, Unbiased Estimation;
Fourier-Laguerre Series; Inverse Laplace Transform; Laguerre Polynomials.Comment: 14 page