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On Multivariate Quantile Regression: Directional Approach and Application with Growth Charts

In this thesis, we introduce a concept of directional quantile envelopes, the intersection of the halfspaces determined by directional quantiles, and show that they allow for explicit probabilistic interpretation, compared to other multivariate quantile concepts. Directional quantile envelopes provide a way to perform multivariate quantile regression: to ``regress contours'' on covariates. We also develop theory and algorithms for an important application of multivariate quantile regression in biometry: bivariate growth charts.

We prove that directional quantiles are continuous and derive their closed-form expression for elliptically symmetric distributions. We provide probabilistic interpretations of directional quantile envelopes and establish that directional quantile envelopes are essentially halfspace depth contours. We show that distributions with smooth directional quantile envelopes
are uniquely determined by their envelopes.

We describe an estimation scheme of directional quantile envelopes and prove its affine equivariance. We establish the consistency of the estimates of directional quantile envelopes and describe their accuracy. The results are applied to estimation of bivariate extreme quantiles. One of the main contributions of this thesis is the construction of bivariate growth charts, an important
application of multivariate quantile regression.

We discuss the computation of our multivariate quantile regression by developing a fast elimination algorithm. The algorithm constructs the set of active halfspaces to form a directional quantile envelope. Applying this algorithm to a large number of quantile halfspaces, we can construct an arbitrary exact approximation of the direction quantile envelope.

In the remainder of the thesis, we exhibit the connection between depth contours and directional regression quantiles
(Laine, 2001), stated without proof in Koenker (2005). Our proof uses the duality theory of primal-dual linear programming. Aiming at interpreting halfspace depth contours, we explore their properties for empirical
distributions, absolutely continuous distributions and certain general distributions.

Finally, we propose a generalized quantile concept, depth quantile, inspired by halfspace depth (Tukey, 1975) and regression depth (Rousseeuw and Hubert, 1999). We study its properties in various data-analytic situations: multivariate and univariate locations, regression with and without intercept. In the end, we show an example that while the quantile regression of Koenker and Bassett (1978) fails, our concept provides sensible answers. / Statistics

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:LACETR/oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:AEU.10048/462
Date11 1900
CreatorsKong, Linglong
ContributorsMizera, Ivan (Mathematical and Statistical Sciences), Schmuland, Byron (Mathematical and Statistical Sciences), Prasad, Narasimha (Mathematical and Statistical Sciences), Wiens, Douglas (Mathematical and Statistical Sciences), Cui, Ying (Educational Psychology), Wei, Ying (Biostatistics, Columbia University)
Source SetsLibrary and Archives Canada ETDs Repository / Centre d'archives des thèses électroniques de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Format2556195 bytes, application/pdf
RelationKong, L. and Mizera, I. (2008). http://arxiv.org/abs/0805.0056v1

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