Depending on the amount of data to process, file generation may take longer.

If it takes too long to generate, you can limit the data by, for example, reducing the range of years.

Article

Download BibTeX

Title

Discrepancy between structured matrices in the power analysis of a separability test

Authors

[ 1 ] Instytut Matematyki, Wydział Automatyki, Robotyki i Elektrotechniki, Politechnika Poznańska | [ P ] employee

Scientific discipline (Law 2.0)

[7.4] Mathematics

Year of publication

2024

Published in

Computational Statistics and Data Analysis

Journal year: 2024 | Journal volume: vol. 192

Article type

scientific article

Publication language

english

Keywords
EN
  • covariance structure
  • entropy loss function
  • likelihood ratio test
  • power analysis
  • quadratic loss function
  • Rao score test
Abstract

EN An important task in the analysis of multivariate data is testing of the covariance matrix structure. In particular, for assessing separability, various tests have been proposed. However, the development of a method of measuring discrepancy between two covariance matrix structures, in relation to the study of the power of the test, remains an open problem. Therefore, a discrepancy measure is proposed such that for two arbitrary alternative hypotheses with the same value of discrepancy, the power of tests remains stable, while for increasing discrepancy the power increases. The basic hypothesis is related to the separable structure of the observation matrix under a doubly multivariate normal model, as assessed by the likelihood ratio and Rao score tests. It is shown that the particular one-parameter method and the Frobenius norm fail in the power analysis of tests, while the entropy and quadratic loss functions can be efficiently used to measure the discrepancy between separable and non-separable covariance structures for a multivariate normal distribution.

Pages (from - to)

107907-1 - 107907-16

DOI

10.1016/j.csda.2023.107907

URL

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167947323002189

Comments

Article number: 107907

Ministry points / journal

100

This website uses cookies to remember the authenticated session of the user. For more information, read about Cookies and Privacy Policy.