Using Empirical Partially Bayes Inference for Increased Efficiency
Lindsay, Bruce G.
Ann. Statist., Tome 13 (1985) no. 1, p. 914-931 / Harvested from Project Euclid
Empirical partially Bayes methods are considered as a means of improving efficiency in a class of problems in which the number of nuisance parameters increases to infinity. In the method used, the parameter of interest is estimated in an asymptotically unbiased way while James-Stein shrinkage is applied to the nuisance parameter estimates. When the shrinkage estimators are carefully chosen, this yields estimators generally more efficient than maximum likelihood. In the models considered, the conditional structure imposed allows construction of a simple estimator which is broadly consistent and efficient.
Publié le : 1985-09-14
Classification:  Conditional score,  empirical Bayes,  James-Stein estimators,  weighted means,  nuisance parameters,  62F10,  62F12
@article{1176349646,
     author = {Lindsay, Bruce G.},
     title = {Using Empirical Partially Bayes Inference for Increased Efficiency},
     journal = {Ann. Statist.},
     volume = {13},
     number = {1},
     year = {1985},
     pages = { 914-931},
     language = {en},
     url = {http://dml.mathdoc.fr/item/1176349646}
}
Lindsay, Bruce G. Using Empirical Partially Bayes Inference for Increased Efficiency. Ann. Statist., Tome 13 (1985) no. 1, pp.  914-931. http://gdmltest.u-ga.fr/item/1176349646/