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  2. Delta method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delta_method

    In statistics, the delta method is a method of deriving the asymptotic distribution of a random variable. It is applicable when the random variable being considered can be defined as a differentiable function of a random variable which is asymptotically Gaussian .

  3. Asymptotic theory (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asymptotic_theory_(statistics)

    In statistics, asymptotic theory, or large sample theory, is a framework for assessing properties of estimators and statistical tests. Within this framework, it is often assumed that the sample size n may grow indefinitely; the properties of estimators and tests are then evaluated under the limit of n → ∞ .

  4. Asymptotic analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asymptotic_analysis

    Asymptotic theory does not provide a method of evaluating the finite-sample distributions of sample statistics, however. Non-asymptotic bounds are provided by methods of approximation theory. Examples of applications are the following. In applied mathematics, asymptotic analysis is used to build numerical methods to approximate equation solutions.

  5. Asymptotic distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asymptotic_distribution

    In mathematics and statistics, an asymptotic distribution is a probability distribution that is in a sense the "limiting" distribution of a sequence of distributions. One of the main uses of the idea of an asymptotic distribution is in providing approximations to the cumulative distribution functions of statistical estimators.

  6. V-statistic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V-statistic

    In this case the asymptotic distribution is called a quadratic form of centered Gaussian random variables. The statistic V 2,n is called a degenerate kernel V-statistic. The V-statistic associated with the Cramer–von Mises functional [1] (Example 3) is an example of a degenerate kernel V-statistic. [8]

  7. Cornish–Fisher expansion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornish–Fisher_expansion

    For comparison, the 95th percentile of a normal random variable with mean 10 and variance 25 would be about 18.224; it makes sense that the normal random variable has a lower 95th percentile value, as the normal distribution has no skew or excess kurtosis, and so has a thinner tail than the random variable X.

  8. Estimator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estimator

    In this formulation V/n can be called the asymptotic variance of the estimator. However, some authors also call V the asymptotic variance. Note that convergence will not necessarily have occurred for any finite "n", therefore this value is only an approximation to the true variance of the estimator, while in the limit the asymptotic variance (V ...

  9. Large deviations theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_deviations_theory

    In probability theory, the theory of large deviations concerns the asymptotic behaviour of remote tails of sequences of probability distributions. While some basic ideas of the theory can be traced to Laplace, the formalization started with insurance mathematics, namely ruin theory with Cramér and Lundberg.