Home
Stochastic Comparisons with Applications: Order Statistics and Spacings
Loading Inventory...
Barnes and Noble
Stochastic Comparisons with Applications: Order Statistics and Spacings
Current price: $159.99
Barnes and Noble
Stochastic Comparisons with Applications: Order Statistics and Spacings
Current price: $159.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact Barnes and Noble
This book emphasizes the use of shastic orders as motivational tools for developing new statistical procedures. Shastic orders have found useful applications in many disciplines, including reliability theory, survival analysis, risk theory, finance, nonparametric methods, economics and actuarial science. Written by a statistician, this volume clarifies the connection between shastic orders and nonparametric methods.
The importance of order statistics and spacings is well recognized. Classically, they mainly focus on the case when the observations are independent and identically distributed, however, several new developments have extended the comparison of order statistics to the case of non-identically distributed or non-independent observations. In addition to giving a detailed discussion of various topics in the general area of shastic orders, a substantial part of the book is devoted to recent research on shastic comparisons of order statistics andspacings, including a long chapter on dependence among them.
The book will be useful for graduate students and researchers in statistics, economics, actuarial science and other related disciplines. In particular, with close to 300 references, it will be a valuable resource for reliability theorists, applied probabilists and statisticians. Readers are expected to have taken a first-year graduate level course in mathematical statistics or in applied probability.
The importance of order statistics and spacings is well recognized. Classically, they mainly focus on the case when the observations are independent and identically distributed, however, several new developments have extended the comparison of order statistics to the case of non-identically distributed or non-independent observations. In addition to giving a detailed discussion of various topics in the general area of shastic orders, a substantial part of the book is devoted to recent research on shastic comparisons of order statistics andspacings, including a long chapter on dependence among them.
The book will be useful for graduate students and researchers in statistics, economics, actuarial science and other related disciplines. In particular, with close to 300 references, it will be a valuable resource for reliability theorists, applied probabilists and statisticians. Readers are expected to have taken a first-year graduate level course in mathematical statistics or in applied probability.