05469nam 2200673Ia 450 991013992960332120170810193228.01-282-38215-297866123821540-470-82444-10-470-82443-3(CKB)1000000000799889(EBL)479828(OCoLC)521034718(SSID)ssj0000365947(PQKBManifestationID)11296468(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000365947(PQKBWorkID)10413875(PQKB)11755440(MiAaPQ)EBC479828(EXLCZ)99100000000079988920090121d2009 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrSmooth tests of goodness of fit[electronic resource] /J.C.W. Rayner, O. Thas, D.J. Best2nd ed.Hoboken, NJ Wileyc20091 online resource (300 p.)Wiley series in probability and statistics Smooth tests of goodness of fit using R Description based upon print version of record.0-470-82442-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.SMOOTH TESTS OF GOODNESS OF FIT USING R; Contents; Preface; 1 Introduction; 1.1 The Problem Defined; 1.2 A Brief History of Smooth Tests; 1.3 Monograph Outline; 1.4 Examples; 2 Pearson's X2 Test; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Foundations; 2.3 The Pearson X2 Test - an Update; 2.3.1 Notation, Definition of the Test, and Class Construction; 2.3.2 Power Related Properties; 2.3.3 The Sample Space Partition Approach; 2.4 X2 Tests of Composite Hypotheses; 2.5 Examples; 3 Asymptotically Optimal Tests; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 The Likelihood Ratio, Wald, and Score Tests for a Simple Null Hypothesis3.3 The Likelihood Ratio, Wald and Score Tests for Composite Null Hypotheses3.4 Generalized Score Tests; 4 Neyman Smooth Tests for Simple Null Hypotheses; 4.1 Neyman's Ψ2 test; 4.2 Neyman Smooth Tests for Uncategorized Simple Null Hypotheses; 4.3 The Choice of Order; 4.4 Examples; 4.5 EDF Tests; 5 Categorized Simple Null Hypotheses; 5.1 Smooth Tests for Completely Specified Multinomials; 5.2 X2 Effective Order; 5.3 Components of X2P; 5.3.1 Construction of the Components; 5.3.2 Power Study; 5.3.3 Diagnostic Tests; 5.3.4 Cressie and Read Tests; 5.4 Examples; 5.5 Class Construction5.5.1 The Alternatives5.5.2 Results of the Simulation Study; 5.5.3 Discussion; 5.6 A More Comprehensive Class of Tests; 5.7 Overlapping Cells Tests; 6 Neyman Smooth Tests for Uncategorized Composite Null Hypotheses; 6.1 Neyman Smooth Tests for Uncategorized Composite Null Hypotheses; 6.2 Smooth Tests for the Univariate Normal Distribution; 6.2.1 The Construction of the Smooth Test; 6.2.2 Simulation Study; 6.2.3 Examples; 6.2.4 Relationship with a Test of Thomas and Pierce; 6.3 Smooth Tests for the Exponential Distribution; 6.4 Smooth Tests for Multivariate Normal Distribution6.5 Smooth Tests for the Bivariate Poisson Distribution6.5.1 Definitions; 6.5.2 Score Tests for the Bivariate Poisson Model; 6.5.3 A Smooth Covariance Test; 6.5.4 Variance Tests; 6.5.5 A Competitor for the Index of Dispersion Test; 6.5.6 Revised Index of Dispersion and Crockett Tests; 6.6 Components of the Rao-Robson X2 Statistic; 7 Neyman Smooth Tests for Categorized Composite Null Hypotheses; 7.1 Neyman Smooth Tests for Composite Multinomials; 7.2 Components of the Pearson-Fisher Statistic; 7.3 Composite Overlapping Cells and Cell Focusing X2 Tests7.4 A Comparison between the Pearson-Fisher and Rao-Robson X2 Tests8 Neyman Smooth Tests for Uncategorized Composite Null Hypotheses: Discrete Distributions; 8.1 Neyman Smooth Tests for Discrete Uncategorized Composite Null Hypotheses; 8.2 Smooth and EDF Tests for the Univariate Poisson Distribution; 8.2.1 Definitions; 8.2.2 Size and Power Study; 8.2.3 Examples; 8.3 Smooth and EDF Tests for the Binomial Distribution; 8.3.1 Definitions; 8.3.2 Size and Power Study; 8.3.3 Examples; 8.4 Smooth Tests for the Geometric Distribution; 8.4.1 Definitions; 8.4.2 Size and Power Study; 8.4.3 Examples9 Construction of Generalized Smooth Tests: Theoretical ContributionsIn this fully revised and expanded edition of Smooth Tests of Goodness of Fit, the latest powerful techniques for assessing statistical and probabilistic models using this proven class of procedures are presented in a practical and easily accessible manner. Emphasis is placed on modern developments such as data-driven tests, diagnostic properties, and model selection techniques. Applicable to most statistical distributions, the methodology described in this book is optimal for deriving tests of fit for new distributions and complex probabilistic models, and is a standard against which nGoodness-of-fit testsStatistical hypothesis testingElectronic books.Goodness-of-fit tests.Statistical hypothesis testing.519.5/6519.56Rayner J. C. W248333Best D. J248334Thas O(Olivier)955818MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910139929603321Smooth tests of goodness of fit2163481UNINA04294nam 22006131 450 991082253800332120240401221752.01-4725-3764-51-4725-3763-7(CKB)2550000001144501(EBL)1507616(SSID)ssj0001161059(PQKBManifestationID)11633642(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001161059(PQKBWorkID)11126625(PQKB)11111401(MiAaPQ)EBC1507616(Au-PeEL)EBL1507616(CaPaEBR)ebr10788127(CaONFJC)MIL615833(OCoLC)862049959(EXLCZ)99255000000114450120060524d2007 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrAn introduction to nineteenth-century French literature /Tim Farrant1st ed.London :Bloomsbury,2007.1 online resource (217 p.)New readingsDescription based upon print version of record.0-7156-2907-7 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Contents; Acknowledgements; Author's Note; Preface; Chronology; 1. Histories; 1.1. Napoleon: myth and impact; 1.2. Désenchantement and arrivisme; 1.3. Representing the contemporary: histories and novels; Illustration; 2. Stories; 2.1. Confessional narratives; 2.2. Memoirs and autobiographies; 2.3. Short stories; 3. Poetry; 3.1. From Classicism to iconoclasm; 3.2. Lyricism and vision; 3.2.1. Lyricism: Lamartine and Desbordes-Valmore; 3.2.2. Vision: Hugo and Baudelaire; 3.3. Things and effects; 3.3.1. L'Art pour l'art and Parnassianism: Gautier and Leconte de Lisle; 3.3.2. Verlaine3.3.3. Rimbaud3.3.4. Mallarmé; 4. Drama; 4.1. Public and private, political and personal; 4.2. Dramas of money and morals; 4.3. The farce of objects: Labiche and Feydeau; 4.3.1. Labiche: Un Chapeau de paille d'Italie; 4.3.2. Feydeau: Le Dindon; 4.3.3. Becque: Les Corbeaux; 4.4. Dramas of interiority: Maeterlinck, Pelléas et Mélisande and Intérieur; 5. Novels; 5.1. From Gothic to modern; 5.2. Fiction: a women's genre?; 5.3. Serialisation and seriousness: the roman-feuilleton; 5.4. Reality and Realism; 5.5. Objectivity and vision; Illustration; 5.6. Naturalism and the novel; 6. Modernities6.1. Science, subjectivity and fiction6.2. Dreams, prose poetry, subjectivity and the Unconscious; 6.2.1. Dreams: Nerval; 6.2.2. Prose poetry: Baudelaire, Lautréamont; 6.2.3. Subjectivity and the Unconscious: Laforgue; 6.3. Modernity and experiment in theatre; 7. Margins, Peripheries and Centres; 7.1. Space, place and perspective; 7.1.1. Paris and the provinces; 7.2. Artists and bourgeois, bohemians and dandies; 7.3. Gender and sexuality; 7.4. Travel, the exotic and race; 7.4.1. Travel and the exotic; 7.4.2. Race; 7.4.3. Anti-Semitism and the Dreyfus affair; 7.5. Coda: two telling textsGlossary of Literary FiguresA; B; C; D; F; G; H; J; K; L; M; N; P; Q; R; S; T; V; Z; Index; A; B; C; D; E; F; G; H; I; J; K; L; M; N; O; P; Q; R; S; T; U; V; W; ZEveryone knows something of nineteenth-century France - or do they? ""Les Miserables"", ""The Lady of the Camelias"" and ""The Three Musketeers"", ""Balzac"" and ""Jules Verne"" live in the popular consciousness as enduring human documents and cultural icons. Yet, the French nineteenth century was even more dynamic than the stereotype suggests. This exciting new introduction takes the literature of the period both as a window on past and present mindsets and as an object of fascination in its own right. Beginning with history, the century''s biggest problem and potential, it looks at narrativeNew readings (London, England)French literature19th centuryHistory and criticismFrench literatureHistory and criticism.840.9007840.9007Farrant Tim1171113MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910822538003321An introduction to nineteenth-century French literature4051972UNINA