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Journal ArticleDOI

Runs and Scans With Applications

Małgorzata Roos
- 01 Dec 2002 - 
- Vol. 97, Iss: 460, pp 1205-1205
TLDR
This text is a revision of the book by Arnold, Costillo, and Sarabia (1992), but with much more depth than the original, and comprises a lively overview of conditionally speciŽ ed models of the conditional distribution.
Abstract
of the conditional distribution speciŽ cations. Chapters 8 and 10 extend these methods from two to more dimensions. Chapter 9 investigates estimation in conditionally speciŽ ed models. Chapter 11 considers models speciŽ ed by conditioning on events speciŽ ed by one variable exceeding a value rather than equaling a value, and Chapter 12 considers models for extreme-value data. Chapter 13 extends conditional speciŽ cation to Bayesian analysis. Chapter 14 describes the related simultaneous-equation models, and Chapter 15 ties in some additional topics. An appendix describes methods of simulation from conditionally speciŽ ed models. Chapters 1–4, plus Chapters 9 and 13, comprise a lively overview of conditionally speciŽ ed models. The remainder of the text constitutes a detailed catalog of results speciŽ c to different conditional distributions. Although this catalog is certainly of value, the reader desiring a briefer and less detailed introduction to the subject might skip the remainder at Ž rst reading. This text is a revision of the book by Arnold, Costillo, and Sarabia (1992). The current version is of similar breadth, but with much more depth than the original. The text is clearly written and accessible with relatively few mathematical prerequisites. I found surprisingly few typographical errors; the authors are to be congratulated for this. In a few cases, regularity conditions for results are not given in full. Generally, this causes little confusion, although something does appear to be missing in the statement of Aczél’s key theorem (Theorem 1.3). Fortunately, most of the results in the sequel are derived from corollaries to this theorem, and the corollaries are stated more precisely. I noted few gaps in the material covered. The only area that I thought was insufŽ ciently represented was application to Markov chain Monte Carlo. Conditional speciŽ cation is particularly important in Gibbs sampling. I believe that many practitioners would beneŽ t from a discussion of the issues involved in these sampling schemes. Each chapter contains numerous exercises. These exercises appear to be at an appropriate level for a graduate course in statistics, and appear to provide appropriate reinforcement for the material in the preceding chapters.

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Citations
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Nonparametric intensity bounds for the delineation of spatial clusters

TL;DR: A method to measure the plausibility of each area being part of a possible localized anomaly in the map of rates and find intensity bounds for the delineation of spatial clusters in maps of areas with known populations and observed number of cases is proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multivariate normal approximation with Stein's method of exchangeable pairs under a general linearity condition

TL;DR: In this paper, a multivariate exchangeable pairs approach was proposed to assess distributional distances to potentially singular multivariate normal distributions, which allows for a normal approximation even when the corresponding statistics of interest do not lend themselves easily to Stein's exchangeable pair approach.
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Statistical Process Control using Shewhart Control Charts with Supplementary Runs Rules

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the basic principles and recent advances in the area of statistical process control charting with the aid of runs rules, and briefly discuss the Markov chain approach which is the most popular technique for studying the run length distribution of run based control charts.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Nonparametric Shewhart-Type Signed-Rank Control Chart Based on Runs

TL;DR: Shewhart-type distribution-free control charts are considered for the known in-control median of a continuous process distribution based on the Wilcoxon signed-rank statistic and some runs type rules and can have better out-of-control performance than the Shewhart X-bar chart and the basicsigned-rank chart for the normal distribution and for some heavy-tailed distributions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sensitivity analysis and efficient method for identifying optimal spaced seeds

TL;DR: The computational aspects of calculating the hitting probability of spaced seeds are studied; and an efficient algorithm for identifying optimal spaced seeds is proposed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the concentration of runs of ones of length exceeding a threshold in a Markov chain

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors considered a homogeneous two state Markov chain of first order and dealt with the position and the length of the shortest segment of the first n, n≥5, trials.
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Bivariate Markov chain embeddable variables of polynomial type

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a general framework for investigating the joint distribution of run length accumulating/enumerating variables by the aid of a Markov chain embedding technique.
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Central Limit Theorem Approximations for the Number of Runs in Markov-dependent Multi-type Sequences

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider Markov-dependent multi-type sequences and study various kinds of runs by examining additive functionals based on state visits and transitions in an appropriately constructed Markov chain.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the Waiting Time for the First Success Run

TL;DR: In this paper, the probability generating function of the waiting time for the first occurrence of consecutive k successes in a sequence of m-th order Markov dependent trials is given as a function of conditional probability generating functions.

Bayesian methods for non-standard missing data problems

TL;DR: This thesis analyzes and develops methodologies in some non-standard missing data problems and adopts a counterfactual approach, known as the Rubin Causal Model, essentially reducing the analysis to a missing data problem.