scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A Measure of Asymptotic Efficiency for Tests of a Hypothesis Based on the sum of Observations

Herman Chernoff
- 01 Dec 1952 - 
- Vol. 23, Iss: 4, pp 493-507
TLDR
In this paper, it was shown that the likelihood ratio test for fixed sample size can be reduced to this form, and that for large samples, a sample of size $n$ with the first test will give about the same probabilities of error as a sample with the second test.
Abstract
In many cases an optimum or computationally convenient test of a simple hypothesis $H_0$ against a simple alternative $H_1$ may be given in the following form. Reject $H_0$ if $S_n = \sum^n_{j=1} X_j \leqq k,$ where $X_1, X_2, \cdots, X_n$ are $n$ independent observations of a chance variable $X$ whose distribution depends on the true hypothesis and where $k$ is some appropriate number. In particular the likelihood ratio test for fixed sample size can be reduced to this form. It is shown that with each test of the above form there is associated an index $\rho$. If $\rho_1$ and $\rho_2$ are the indices corresponding to two alternative tests $e = \log \rho_1/\log \rho_2$ measures the relative efficiency of these tests in the following sense. For large samples, a sample of size $n$ with the first test will give about the same probabilities of error as a sample of size $en$ with the second test. To obtain the above result, use is made of the fact that $P(S_n \leqq na)$ behaves roughly like $m^n$ where $m$ is the minimum value assumed by the moment generating function of $X - a$. It is shown that if $H_0$ and $H_1$ specify probability distributions of $X$ which are very close to each other, one may approximate $\rho$ by assuming that $X$ is normally distributed.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum-optimal detection of one-versus-two incoherent sources with arbitrary separation

TL;DR: In this paper, the fundamental resolution of incoherent optical point sources from the perspective of a quantum detection problem is analyzed: deciding whether the optical field on the image plane is generated by one source or two weaker sources with arbitrary separation.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Ω(n4/3) lower bound on the randomized complexity of graph properties

TL;DR: This work improves King's Ω(n5/4) lower bound on the randomized decision tree complexity of monotone graph properties to Ω (n4/3), following Yao's approach and improving it in a different direction from King's.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A probabilistic relation between desirable and feasible, models of parallel computation

Eli Upfal
TL;DR: It is proved that if a program required a program to take PRAM steps, the simulation algorithm executes it on the ULTRACOMPUTER within O(t)(log2n) steps with overwhelming probability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Filtering trust opinions through reinforcement learning

TL;DR: The Actor-Critic Trust model is proposed, which is an adaptive trust evidence aggregation model based on the principles of reinforcement learning that significantly outperforms existing approaches in terms of mitigating the adverse effect of biased testimonies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Broadcasting with random faults

TL;DR: This work considers the problem of broadcasting in an n-vertex graph a message that originates from a given vertex, in the presence of random edge faults, and finds networks for which the broadcast can be done in time O(log n), with high probability.
References
More filters