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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

D- and Ds-optimal Designs for Estimation of Parameters in Bivariate Copula Models

Liu, Hua-Kun 27 July 2007 (has links)
For current status data, the failure time of interest may not be observed exactly. The type of this data consists only of a monitoring time and knowledge of whether the failure time occurred before or after the monitoring time. In order to be able to obtain more information from this data, so the monitoring time is very important. In this work, the optimal designs for determining the monitoring times such that maximum information may be obtained in bivariate copula model (Clayton) are investigated. Here, the D- optimal criterion is used to decide the best monitoring time Ci (i = 1; ¢ ¢ ¢ ; n), then use these monitoring times Ci to estimate the unknown parameters simultaneously by maximizing the corresponding likelihood function. Ds-optimal designs for estimation of association parameter in the copula model are also discussed. Simulation studies are presented to compare the performance of using monitoring time C¤D and C¤Ds to do the estimation.
2

Statistical modeling and design in forestry : The case of single tree models

Berhe, Leakemariam January 2008 (has links)
<p>Forest quantification methods have evolved from a simple graphical approach to complex regression models with stochastic structural components. Currently, mixed effects models methodology is receiving attention in the forestry literature. However, the review work (Paper I) indicates a tendency to overlook appropriate covariance structures in the NLME modeling process.</p><p>A nonlinear mixed effects modeling process is demonstrated in Paper II using Cupressus lustanica tree merchantable volume data and compared several models with and without covariance structures. For simplicity and clarity of the nonlinear mixed effects modeling, four phases of modeling were introduced. The nonlinear mixed effects model for C. lustanica tree merchantable volume with the covariance structures for both the random effects and within group errors has shown a significant improvement over the model with simplified covariance matrix. However, this statistical significance has little to explain in the prediction performance of the model.</p><p>In Paper III, using several performance indicator statistics, tree taper models were compared in an effort to propose the best model for the forest management and planning purpose of the C. lustanica plantations. Kozak's (1988) tree taper model was found to be the best for estimating C. lustanica taper profile.</p><p>Based on the Kozak (1988) tree taper model, a Ds optimal experimental design study is carried out in Paper IV. In this study, a Ds-optimal (sub) replication free design is suggested for the Kozak (1988) tree taper model.</p>
3

Ds-optimal designs for weighted polynomial regression

Mao, Chiang-Yuan 21 June 2007 (has links)
This paper is devoted to studying the problem of constructing Ds-optimal design for d-th degree polynomial regression with analytic weight function on the interval [m-a,m+a],m,a in R. It is demonstrated that the structure of the optimal design depends on d, a and weight function only, as a close to 0. Moreover, the Taylor polynomials of the scaled versions of the optimal support points and weights can be computed via a recursive formula.
4

Statistical modeling and design in forestry : The case of single tree models

Berhe, Leakemariam January 2008 (has links)
Forest quantification methods have evolved from a simple graphical approach to complex regression models with stochastic structural components. Currently, mixed effects models methodology is receiving attention in the forestry literature. However, the review work (Paper I) indicates a tendency to overlook appropriate covariance structures in the NLME modeling process. A nonlinear mixed effects modeling process is demonstrated in Paper II using Cupressus lustanica tree merchantable volume data and compared several models with and without covariance structures. For simplicity and clarity of the nonlinear mixed effects modeling, four phases of modeling were introduced. The nonlinear mixed effects model for C. lustanica tree merchantable volume with the covariance structures for both the random effects and within group errors has shown a significant improvement over the model with simplified covariance matrix. However, this statistical significance has little to explain in the prediction performance of the model. In Paper III, using several performance indicator statistics, tree taper models were compared in an effort to propose the best model for the forest management and planning purpose of the C. lustanica plantations. Kozak's (1988) tree taper model was found to be the best for estimating C. lustanica taper profile. Based on the Kozak (1988) tree taper model, a Ds optimal experimental design study is carried out in Paper IV. In this study, a Ds-optimal (sub) replication free design is suggested for the Kozak (1988) tree taper model.

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