5,758 research outputs found

    A comparative study of several bootstrap-based tests for the volatility in continuous-time diffusion models

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    This article develops three bootstrap-based tests for a parametric form of volatil- ity function in continuous-time diffusion models. The three tests are the generalized likelihood ratio test by Fan et al. (Ann Stat 29(1):153–193, 2001), the nonparamet- ric kernel test (LWZ) by Li and Wang (J Econometrics 87(1):145–165, 1998) and Zheng (J Econ 75(2):263–289, 1996) and the nonparametric test (CHS) by Chen et al. (2017). Monte Carlo simulations are performed to evaluate the sizes and power properties of these bootstrap-based tests in finite samples over a range of bandwidth values. We find that the bootstrap-based tests are not influenced by prior restrictions on the functional form of the drift function and that the bootstrap-based CHS test has better power performance than the bootstrap-based GLR and LWZ tests in detect- ing a parametric form of volatility. An empirical study on weekly treasury bill rate is further conducted to demonstrate these bootstrap-based test procedures.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    The Dominant Eigenvalue of an Essentially Nonnegative Tensor

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    It is well known that the dominant eigenvalue of a real essentially nonnegative matrix is a convex function of its diagonal entries. This convexity is of practical importance in population biology, graph theory, demography, analytic hierarchy process and so on. In this paper, the concept of essentially nonnegativity is extended from matrices to higher order tensors, and the convexity and log convexity of dominant eigenvalues for such a class of tensors are established. Particularly, for any nonnegative tensor, the spectral radius turns out to be the dominant eigenvalue and hence possesses these convexities. Finally, an algorithm is given to calculate the dominant eigenvalue, and numerical results are reported to show the effectiveness of the proposed algorithm

    M-tensors and The Positive Definiteness of a Multivariate Form

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    We study M-tensors and various properties of M-tensors are given. Specially, we show that the smallest real eigenvalue of M-tensor is positive corresponding to a nonnegative eigenvector. We propose an algorithm to find the smallest positive eigenvalue and then apply the property to study the positive definiteness of a multivariate form
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