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Empirical likelihood and extremesGong, Yun 17 January 2012 (has links)
In 1988, Owen introduced empirical likelihood as a nonparametric method for constructing confidence intervals and regions. Since then, empirical likelihood has been studied extensively in the
literature due to its generality and effectiveness. It is well known that empirical likelihood has several attractive advantages
comparing to its competitors such as bootstrap: determining the shape of confidence regions automatically using only the data;
straightforwardly incorporating side information expressed through constraints; being Bartlett correctable. The main part of this
thesis extends the empirical likelihood method to several interesting and important statistical inference situations. This thesis has four components. The first component (Chapter II)
proposes a smoothed jackknife empirical likelihood method to construct confidence intervals for the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve in order to overcome the computational
difficulty when we have nonlinear constrains in the maximization problem. The second component (Chapter III and IV) proposes smoothed
empirical likelihood methods to obtain interval estimation for the conditional Value-at-Risk with the volatility model being an ARCH/GARCH model and a nonparametric regression respectively, which
have applications in financial risk management. The third component(Chapter V) derives the empirical likelihood for the intermediate
quantiles, which plays an important role in the statistics of extremes. Finally, the fourth component (Chapter VI and VII)
presents two additional results: in Chapter VI, we present an interesting result by showing that, when the third moment is infinity, we may prefer the Student's t-statistic to the sample mean
standardized by the true standard deviation; in Chapter VII, we present a method for testing a subset of parameters for a given
parametric model of stationary processes.
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