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Symbolic Calculus in Mathematical Statistics: A Review

Elvira Di Nardo
- 28 Dec 2015 - 
- pp 1-72
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TLDR
In the last ten years, the use of symbolic methods has substantially extended both the theory and the applications of statistics and probability as mentioned in this paper, and the main tools are a formal generalization of the convolution of identical probability distributions, which allows us to employ compound Poisson random variables in various topics that are only somewhat interrelated.
Abstract
In the last ten years, the employment of symbolic methods has substantially extended both the theory and the applications of statistics and probability. This survey reviews the development of a symbolic technique arising from classical umbral calculus, as introduced by Rota and Taylor in $1994.$ The usefulness of this symbolic technique is twofold. The first is to show how new algebraic identities drive in discovering insights among topics apparently very far from each other and related to probability and statistics. One of the main tools is a formal generalization of the convolution of identical probability distributions, which allows us to employ compound Poisson random variables in various topics that are only somewhat interrelated. Having got a different and deeper viewpoint, the second goal is to show how to set up algorithmic processes performing efficiently algebraic calculations. In particular, the challenge of finding these symbolic procedures should lead to a new method, and it poses new problems involving both computational and conceptual issues. Evidence of efficiency in applying this symbolic method will be shown within statistical inference, parameter estimation, Levy processes, and, more generally, problems involving multivariate functions. The symbolic representation of Sheffer polynomial sequences allows us to carry out a unifying theory of classical, Boolean and free cumulants. Recent connections within random matrices have extended the applications of the symbolic method.

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Lévy processes and infinitely divisible distributions

健一 佐藤
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the distributional properties of Levy processes and propose a potential theory for Levy processes, which is based on the Wiener-Hopf factorization.
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A cumulant approach for the first-passage-time problem of the Feller square-root process

TL;DR: The resulting procedure is made easier to implement by the symbolic calculus and a rational choice of the polynomial degree depending on skewness, kurtosis and hyperskewness and some case studies show the goodness of the approximation even for a low number of terms.
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A cumulant approach for the first-passage-time problem of the Feller square-root process

TL;DR: In this paper, an approximation of the first passage time probability density function of a Feller stochastic process by using cumulants and a Laguerre-Gamma polynomial approximation is presented.
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kStatistics: Unbiased Estimates of Joint Cumulant Products from the Multivariate Faà Di Bruno's Formula

E. Di Nardo, +1 more
- 30 Jun 2022 - 
TL;DR: kStatistics as discussed by the authors is a package in R that serves as a unified framework for estimating univariate and multivariate cumulants as well as products of univariate Cumulants of a random sample, using unbiased estimators with minimum variance.
References
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An Introduction To Probability Theory And Its Applications

TL;DR: A First Course in Probability (8th ed.) by S. Ross is a lively text that covers the basic ideas of probability theory including those needed in statistics.
Book

Analytic Combinatorics

TL;DR: This text can be used as the basis for an advanced undergraduate or a graduate course on the subject, or for self-study, and is certain to become the definitive reference on the topic.
Book

Lévy Processes and Stochastic Calculus

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a general theory of Levy processes and a stochastic calculus for Levy processes in a direct and accessible way, including necessary and sufficient conditions for Levy process to have finite moments.