si

Drug use before and during drug abuse treatment : 1979-1981 TOPS admission cohorts / S. Gail Craddock, Robert M. Bray, Robert L. Hubbard.

Rockville, Maryland : National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1985.




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Psychosocial characteristics of drug-abusing women / by Marvin R. Burt, principal investigator ; Thomas J. Glynn, Barbara J. Sowder ; Burt Associates, Inc.

Rockville, Maryland : National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1979.




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Professional and paraprofessional drug abuse counselors : three reports / Leonard A. LoSciuto, Leona S. Aiken, Mary Ann Ausetts ; [compiled, written, and prepared for publication by the Institute for Survey Research, Temple University].

Rockville, Maryland : National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1979.




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Evaluation of drug abuse treatments : based on first year followup : national followup study of admissions to drug abuse treatments in the DARP during 1969-1972.

Rockville, Maryland : National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1978.




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Survey of drug information needs and problems associated with communications directed to practicing physicians : part III : remedial ad survey / [Arthur Ruskin, M.D.]

Springfield, Virginia : National Technical Information Service, 1974.




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The nature and treatment of nonopiate abuse : a review of the literature. Volume 2 / Wynne Associates for Division of Research, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Alcohol, Drug Abuse and Mental Health Administration, Department of Health, Education and Wel

Washington, D.C. : Wynne Associates, 1974.




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Evaluation of treatment programs for abusers of nonopiate drugs : problems and approaches. Volume 3 / Wynne Associates for Division of Research, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Alcohol, Drug Abuse and Mental Health Administration, Department of Health,

Washington, D.C. : Wynne Associates, [1974]




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Making the connection : health care needs of drug using prostitutes : information pack / by Jean Faugier and Steve Cranfield.

[Manchester] : School of Nursing Studies, University of Manchester, [1995?]




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Policy and guidelines for the provision of needle and syringe exchange services to young people / Tom Aldridge and Andrew Preston.

[Dorchester] : Dorset Community NHS Trust, 1997.




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The university chemical dependency project : final report : November 1 1986 / Steven A. Bloch, Steven Ungerleider.

[Indiana] : Integrated Research Services, Inc., 1986.




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Jessie Jean Roberts recipe book, 1940s+




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Series 02 Part 01: Sir Augustus Charles Gregory letterbook, 1852-1854




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Signs of the times

Since we began digitising the Holtermann negatives to our new standard we have been able to view previously unclear deta




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Sizing up the collection

The Holtermann Collection Digitisation Project is focused mainly on the original glass plate negatives taken by the Amer




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Top three Mikayla Pivec moments: Pivec's OSU rebounding record highlights her impressive career

All-Pac-12 talent Mikayla Pivec's career in Corvallis has been memorable to say the least. While it's difficult to choose just three, her top moments include a career-high 19 rebounds against Washington, a buzzer-beating layup against ASU, and breaking Ruth Hamblin's Oregon State rebounding record this year against Stanford.




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Texas hires Schaefer from Mississippi State

Texas moved quickly to hire a new women's basketball coach, luring Vic Schaefer away from powerhouse Mississippi State on Sunday. Texas athletic director Chris Del Conte announced the move by tweeting a picture of himself with Schaefer and his family holding up the “Hook'em Horns” hand signal. The move comes just two days after Texas dismissed eight-year coach Karen Aston, who had only one losing season in her tenure and had led the Longhorns to the Sweet 16 or farther four times.




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WNBA Draft Profile: Do-it-all OSU talent Mikayla Pivec has her sights set on a pro breakout

Oregon State guard Mikayla Pivec is the epitome of a versatile player. Her 1,030 career rebounds were the most in school history, and she finished just one assist shy of becoming the first in OSU history to tally 1,500 points, 1,000 rebounds and 500 assists. She'll head to the WNBA looking to showcase her talents at the next level following the 2020 WNBA Draft.




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Inside Sabrina Ionescu and Ruthy Hebard's lasting bond on quick look of 'Our Stories'

Learn how Oregon stars Sabrina Ionescu and Ruthy Hebard developed a lasting bond as college freshmen and carried that through storied four-year careers for the Ducks. Watch "Our Stories Unfinished Business: Sabrina Ionescu and Ruthy Hebard" debuting Wednesday, April 15 at 7 p.m. PT/ 8 p.m. MT on Pac-12 Network.




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Mississippi State hires Nikki McCray-Penson as women's coach

Mississippi State hired former Old Dominion women’s basketball coach Nikki McCray-Penson to replace Vic Schaefer as the Bulldogs’ head coach. Athletic director John Cohen called McCray-Penson “a proven winner who will lead one of the best programs in the nation” on the department’s website. McCray-Penson, a former Tennessee star and Women’s Basketball Hall of Famer, said it’s been a dream to coach in the Southeastern Conference and she’s “grateful and blessed for this incredible honor and opportunity.”




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Chicago State women's basketball coach Misty Opat resigns

CHICAGO (AP) -- Chicago State women’s coach Misty Opat resigned Thursday after two seasons and a 3-55 record.




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Baylor women sign transfer point guard for 3rd year in row

Baylor has signed a transfer point guard for the third year in a row, and this one can play multiple seasons with the Lady Bears. Jaden Owens is transferring from UCLA after signing a national letter of intent with Baylor, which had graduate transfers at point guard each of the past two seasons. The Texas native just completed her freshman season with the Bruins and has three seasons of eligibility remaining.




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Natalie Chou on why she took a stand against anti-Asian racism in wake of coronavirus

During Wednesday's "Pac-12 Perspective" podcast, Natalie Chou shared why she is using her platform to speak out against racism she sees in her community related to the novel coronavirus.




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UCLA's Natalie Chou on her role models, inspiring Asian-American girls in basketball

Pac-12 Networks' Mike Yam has a conversation with UCLA's Natalie Chou during Wednesday's "Pac-12 Perspective" podcast. Chou reflects on her role models, passion for basketball and how her mom has made a big impact on her hoops career.




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Natalie Chou breaks through stereotypes, inspires young Asian American girls on 'Our Stories' quick look

Watch the debut of "Our Stories - Natalie Chou" on Sunday, May 10 at 12:30 p.m. PT/ 1:30 p.m. MT on Pac-12 Network.




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The limiting behavior of isotonic and convex regression estimators when the model is misspecified

Eunji Lim.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 2053--2097.

Abstract:
We study the asymptotic behavior of the least squares estimators when the model is possibly misspecified. We consider the setting where we wish to estimate an unknown function $f_{*}:(0,1)^{d} ightarrow mathbb{R}$ from observations $(X,Y),(X_{1},Y_{1}),cdots ,(X_{n},Y_{n})$; our estimator $hat{g}_{n}$ is the minimizer of $sum _{i=1}^{n}(Y_{i}-g(X_{i}))^{2}/n$ over $gin mathcal{G}$ for some set of functions $mathcal{G}$. We provide sufficient conditions on the metric entropy of $mathcal{G}$, under which $hat{g}_{n}$ converges to $g_{*}$ as $n ightarrow infty $, where $g_{*}$ is the minimizer of $|g-f_{*}| riangleq mathbb{E}(g(X)-f_{*}(X))^{2}$ over $gin mathcal{G}$. As corollaries of our theorem, we establish $|hat{g}_{n}-g_{*}| ightarrow 0$ as $n ightarrow infty $ when $mathcal{G}$ is the set of monotone functions or the set of convex functions. We also make a connection between the convergence rate of $|hat{g}_{n}-g_{*}|$ and the metric entropy of $mathcal{G}$. As special cases of our finding, we compute the convergence rate of $|hat{g}_{n}-g_{*}|^{2}$ when $mathcal{G}$ is the set of bounded monotone functions or the set of bounded convex functions.




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Nonparametric confidence intervals for conditional quantiles with large-dimensional covariates

Laurent Gardes.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 661--701.

Abstract:
The first part of the paper is dedicated to the construction of a $gamma$ - nonparametric confidence interval for a conditional quantile with a level depending on the sample size. When this level tends to 0 or 1 as the sample size increases, the conditional quantile is said to be extreme and is located in the tail of the conditional distribution. The proposed confidence interval is constructed by approximating the distribution of the order statistics selected with a nearest neighbor approach by a Beta distribution. We show that its coverage probability converges to the preselected probability $gamma $ and its accuracy is illustrated on a simulation study. When the dimension of the covariate increases, the coverage probability of the confidence interval can be very different from $gamma $. This is a well known consequence of the data sparsity especially in the tail of the distribution. In a second part, a dimension reduction procedure is proposed in order to select more appropriate nearest neighbors in the right tail of the distribution and in turn to obtain a better coverage probability for extreme conditional quantiles. This procedure is based on the Tail Conditional Independence assumption introduced in (Gardes, Extremes , pp. 57–95, 18(3) , 2018).




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Statistical convergence of the EM algorithm on Gaussian mixture models

Ruofei Zhao, Yuanzhi Li, Yuekai Sun.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 632--660.

Abstract:
We study the convergence behavior of the Expectation Maximization (EM) algorithm on Gaussian mixture models with an arbitrary number of mixture components and mixing weights. We show that as long as the means of the components are separated by at least $Omega (sqrt{min {M,d}})$, where $M$ is the number of components and $d$ is the dimension, the EM algorithm converges locally to the global optimum of the log-likelihood. Further, we show that the convergence rate is linear and characterize the size of the basin of attraction to the global optimum.




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On the Letac-Massam conjecture and existence of high dimensional Bayes estimators for graphical models

Emanuel Ben-David, Bala Rajaratnam.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 580--604.

Abstract:
The Wishart distribution defined on the open cone of positive-definite matrices plays a central role in multivariate analysis and multivariate distribution theory. Its domain of parameters is often referred to as the Gindikin set. In recent years, varieties of useful extensions of the Wishart distribution have been proposed in the literature for the purposes of studying Markov random fields and graphical models. In particular, generalizations of the Wishart distribution, referred to as Type I and Type II (graphical) Wishart distributions introduced by Letac and Massam in Annals of Statistics (2007) play important roles in both frequentist and Bayesian inference for Gaussian graphical models. These distributions have been especially useful in high-dimensional settings due to the flexibility offered by their multiple-shape parameters. Concerning Type I and Type II Wishart distributions, a conjecture of Letac and Massam concerns the domain of multiple-shape parameters of these distributions. The conjecture also has implications for the existence of Bayes estimators corresponding to these high dimensional priors. The conjecture, which was first posed in the Annals of Statistics, has now been an open problem for about 10 years. In this paper, we give a necessary condition for the Letac and Massam conjecture to hold. More precisely, we prove that if the Letac and Massam conjecture holds on a decomposable graph, then no two separators of the graph can be nested within each other. For this, we analyze Type I and Type II Wishart distributions on appropriate Markov equivalent perfect DAG models and succeed in deriving the aforementioned necessary condition. This condition in particular identifies a class of counterexamples to the conjecture.




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Drift estimation for stochastic reaction-diffusion systems

Gregor Pasemann, Wilhelm Stannat.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 547--579.

Abstract:
A parameter estimation problem for a class of semilinear stochastic evolution equations is considered. Conditions for consistency and asymptotic normality are given in terms of growth and continuity properties of the nonlinear part. Emphasis is put on the case of stochastic reaction-diffusion systems. Robustness results for statistical inference under model uncertainty are provided.




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Gaussian field on the symmetric group: Prediction and learning

François Bachoc, Baptiste Broto, Fabrice Gamboa, Jean-Michel Loubes.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 503--546.

Abstract:
In the framework of the supervised learning of a real function defined on an abstract space $mathcal{X}$, Gaussian processes are widely used. The Euclidean case for $mathcal{X}$ is well known and has been widely studied. In this paper, we explore the less classical case where $mathcal{X}$ is the non commutative finite group of permutations (namely the so-called symmetric group $S_{N}$). We provide an application to Gaussian process based optimization of Latin Hypercube Designs. We also extend our results to the case of partial rankings.




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On polyhedral estimation of signals via indirect observations

Anatoli Juditsky, Arkadi Nemirovski.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 458--502.

Abstract:
We consider the problem of recovering linear image of unknown signal belonging to a given convex compact signal set from noisy observation of another linear image of the signal. We develop a simple generic efficiently computable non linear in observations “polyhedral” estimate along with computation-friendly techniques for its design and risk analysis. We demonstrate that under favorable circumstances the resulting estimate is provably near-optimal in the minimax sense, the “favorable circumstances” being less restrictive than the weakest known so far assumptions ensuring near-optimality of estimates which are linear in observations.




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Recovery of simultaneous low rank and two-way sparse coefficient matrices, a nonconvex approach

Ming Yu, Varun Gupta, Mladen Kolar.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 413--457.

Abstract:
We study the problem of recovery of matrices that are simultaneously low rank and row and/or column sparse. Such matrices appear in recent applications in cognitive neuroscience, imaging, computer vision, macroeconomics, and genetics. We propose a GDT (Gradient Descent with hard Thresholding) algorithm to efficiently recover matrices with such structure, by minimizing a bi-convex function over a nonconvex set of constraints. We show linear convergence of the iterates obtained by GDT to a region within statistical error of an optimal solution. As an application of our method, we consider multi-task learning problems and show that the statistical error rate obtained by GDT is near optimal compared to minimax rate. Experiments demonstrate competitive performance and much faster running speed compared to existing methods, on both simulations and real data sets.




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Parseval inequalities and lower bounds for variance-based sensitivity indices

Olivier Roustant, Fabrice Gamboa, Bertrand Iooss.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 386--412.

Abstract:
The so-called polynomial chaos expansion is widely used in computer experiments. For example, it is a powerful tool to estimate Sobol’ sensitivity indices. In this paper, we consider generalized chaos expansions built on general tensor Hilbert basis. In this frame, we revisit the computation of the Sobol’ indices with Parseval equalities and give general lower bounds for these indices obtained by truncation. The case of the eigenfunctions system associated with a Poincaré differential operator leads to lower bounds involving the derivatives of the analyzed function and provides an efficient tool for variable screening. These lower bounds are put in action both on toy and real life models demonstrating their accuracy.




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Consistent model selection criteria and goodness-of-fit test for common time series models

Jean-Marc Bardet, Kare Kamila, William Kengne.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 2009--2052.

Abstract:
This paper studies the model selection problem in a large class of causal time series models, which includes both the ARMA or AR($infty $) processes, as well as the GARCH or ARCH($infty $), APARCH, ARMA-GARCH and many others processes. To tackle this issue, we consider a penalized contrast based on the quasi-likelihood of the model. We provide sufficient conditions for the penalty term to ensure the consistency of the proposed procedure as well as the consistency and the asymptotic normality of the quasi-maximum likelihood estimator of the chosen model. We also propose a tool for diagnosing the goodness-of-fit of the chosen model based on a Portmanteau test. Monte-Carlo experiments and numerical applications on illustrative examples are performed to highlight the obtained asymptotic results. Moreover, using a data-driven choice of the penalty, they show the practical efficiency of this new model selection procedure and Portemanteau test.




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Asymptotic properties of the maximum likelihood and cross validation estimators for transformed Gaussian processes

François Bachoc, José Betancourt, Reinhard Furrer, Thierry Klein.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 1962--2008.

Abstract:
The asymptotic analysis of covariance parameter estimation of Gaussian processes has been subject to intensive investigation. However, this asymptotic analysis is very scarce for non-Gaussian processes. In this paper, we study a class of non-Gaussian processes obtained by regular non-linear transformations of Gaussian processes. We provide the increasing-domain asymptotic properties of the (Gaussian) maximum likelihood and cross validation estimators of the covariance parameters of a non-Gaussian process of this class. We show that these estimators are consistent and asymptotically normal, although they are defined as if the process was Gaussian. They do not need to model or estimate the non-linear transformation. Our results can thus be interpreted as a robustness of (Gaussian) maximum likelihood and cross validation towards non-Gaussianity. Our proofs rely on two technical results that are of independent interest for the increasing-domain asymptotic literature of spatial processes. First, we show that, under mild assumptions, coefficients of inverses of large covariance matrices decay at an inverse polynomial rate as a function of the corresponding observation location distances. Second, we provide a general central limit theorem for quadratic forms obtained from transformed Gaussian processes. Finally, our asymptotic results are illustrated by numerical simulations.




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Sparse equisigned PCA: Algorithms and performance bounds in the noisy rank-1 setting

Arvind Prasadan, Raj Rao Nadakuditi, Debashis Paul.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 345--385.

Abstract:
Singular value decomposition (SVD) based principal component analysis (PCA) breaks down in the high-dimensional and limited sample size regime below a certain critical eigen-SNR that depends on the dimensionality of the system and the number of samples. Below this critical eigen-SNR, the estimates returned by the SVD are asymptotically uncorrelated with the latent principal components. We consider a setting where the left singular vector of the underlying rank one signal matrix is assumed to be sparse and the right singular vector is assumed to be equisigned, that is, having either only nonnegative or only nonpositive entries. We consider six different algorithms for estimating the sparse principal component based on different statistical criteria and prove that by exploiting sparsity, we recover consistent estimates in the low eigen-SNR regime where the SVD fails. Our analysis reveals conditions under which a coordinate selection scheme based on a sum-type decision statistic outperforms schemes that utilize the $ell _{1}$ and $ell _{2}$ norm-based statistics. We derive lower bounds on the size of detectable coordinates of the principal left singular vector and utilize these lower bounds to derive lower bounds on the worst-case risk. Finally, we verify our findings with numerical simulations and a illustrate the performance with a video data where the interest is in identifying objects.




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Asymptotics and optimal bandwidth for nonparametric estimation of density level sets

Wanli Qiao.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 302--344.

Abstract:
Bandwidth selection is crucial in the kernel estimation of density level sets. A risk based on the symmetric difference between the estimated and true level sets is usually used to measure their proximity. In this paper we provide an asymptotic $L^{p}$ approximation to this risk, where $p$ is characterized by the weight function in the risk. In particular the excess risk corresponds to an $L^{2}$ type of risk, and is adopted to derive an optimal bandwidth for nonparametric level set estimation of $d$-dimensional density functions ($dgeq 1$). A direct plug-in bandwidth selector is developed for kernel density level set estimation and its efficacy is verified in numerical studies.




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Assessing prediction error at interpolation and extrapolation points

Assaf Rabinowicz, Saharon Rosset.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 272--301.

Abstract:
Common model selection criteria, such as $AIC$ and its variants, are based on in-sample prediction error estimators. However, in many applications involving predicting at interpolation and extrapolation points, in-sample error does not represent the relevant prediction error. In this paper new prediction error estimators, $tAI$ and $Loss(w_{t})$ are introduced. These estimators generalize previous error estimators, however are also applicable for assessing prediction error in cases involving interpolation and extrapolation. Based on these prediction error estimators, two model selection criteria with the same spirit as $AIC$ and Mallow’s $C_{p}$ are suggested. The advantages of our suggested methods are demonstrated in a simulation and a real data analysis of studies involving interpolation and extrapolation in linear mixed model and Gaussian process regression.




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Bayesian variance estimation in the Gaussian sequence model with partial information on the means

Gianluca Finocchio, Johannes Schmidt-Hieber.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 239--271.

Abstract:
Consider the Gaussian sequence model under the additional assumption that a fixed fraction of the means is known. We study the problem of variance estimation from a frequentist Bayesian perspective. The maximum likelihood estimator (MLE) for $sigma^{2}$ is biased and inconsistent. This raises the question whether the posterior is able to correct the MLE in this case. By developing a new proving strategy that uses refined properties of the posterior distribution, we find that the marginal posterior is inconsistent for any i.i.d. prior on the mean parameters. In particular, no assumption on the decay of the prior needs to be imposed. Surprisingly, we also find that consistency can be retained for a hierarchical prior based on Gaussian mixtures. In this case we also establish a limiting shape result and determine the limit distribution. In contrast to the classical Bernstein-von Mises theorem, the limit is non-Gaussian. We show that the Bayesian analysis leads to new statistical estimators outperforming the correctly calibrated MLE in a numerical simulation study.




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Perspective maximum likelihood-type estimation via proximal decomposition

Patrick L. Combettes, Christian L. Müller.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 207--238.

Abstract:
We introduce a flexible optimization model for maximum likelihood-type estimation (M-estimation) that encompasses and generalizes a large class of existing statistical models, including Huber’s concomitant M-estimator, Owen’s Huber/Berhu concomitant estimator, the scaled lasso, support vector machine regression, and penalized estimation with structured sparsity. The model, termed perspective M-estimation, leverages the observation that convex M-estimators with concomitant scale as well as various regularizers are instances of perspective functions, a construction that extends a convex function to a jointly convex one in terms of an additional scale variable. These nonsmooth functions are shown to be amenable to proximal analysis, which leads to principled and provably convergent optimization algorithms via proximal splitting. We derive novel proximity operators for several perspective functions of interest via a geometrical approach based on duality. We then devise a new proximal splitting algorithm to solve the proposed M-estimation problem and establish the convergence of both the scale and regression iterates it produces to a solution. Numerical experiments on synthetic and real-world data illustrate the broad applicability of the proposed framework.




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Estimation of linear projections of non-sparse coefficients in high-dimensional regression

David Azriel, Armin Schwartzman.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 174--206.

Abstract:
In this work we study estimation of signals when the number of parameters is much larger than the number of observations. A large body of literature assumes for these kind of problems a sparse structure where most of the parameters are zero or close to zero. When this assumption does not hold, one can focus on low-dimensional functions of the parameter vector. In this work we study one-dimensional linear projections. Specifically, in the context of high-dimensional linear regression, the parameter of interest is ${oldsymbol{eta}}$ and we study estimation of $mathbf{a}^{T}{oldsymbol{eta}}$. We show that $mathbf{a}^{T}hat{oldsymbol{eta}}$, where $hat{oldsymbol{eta}}$ is the least squares estimator, using pseudo-inverse when $p>n$, is minimax and admissible. Thus, for linear projections no regularization or shrinkage is needed. This estimator is easy to analyze and confidence intervals can be constructed. We study a high-dimensional dataset from brain imaging where it is shown that the signal is weak, non-sparse and significantly different from zero.




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Adaptive estimation in the supremum norm for semiparametric mixtures of regressions

Heiko Werner, Hajo Holzmann, Pierre Vandekerkhove.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 1816--1871.

Abstract:
We investigate a flexible two-component semiparametric mixture of regressions model, in which one of the conditional component distributions of the response given the covariate is unknown but assumed symmetric about a location parameter, while the other is specified up to a scale parameter. The location and scale parameters together with the proportion are allowed to depend nonparametrically on covariates. After settling identifiability, we provide local M-estimators for these parameters which converge in the sup-norm at the optimal rates over Hölder-smoothness classes. We also introduce an adaptive version of the estimators based on the Lepski-method. Sup-norm bounds show that the local M-estimator properly estimates the functions globally, and are the first step in the construction of useful inferential tools such as confidence bands. In our analysis we develop general results about rates of convergence in the sup-norm as well as adaptive estimation of local M-estimators which might be of some independent interest, and which can also be applied in various other settings. We investigate the finite-sample behaviour of our method in a simulation study, and give an illustration to a real data set from bioinformatics.




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Exact recovery in block spin Ising models at the critical line

Matthias Löwe, Kristina Schubert.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 1796--1815.

Abstract:
We show how to exactly reconstruct the block structure at the critical line in the so-called Ising block model. This model was recently re-introduced by Berthet, Rigollet and Srivastava in [2]. There the authors show how to exactly reconstruct blocks away from the critical line and they give an upper and a lower bound on the number of observations one needs; thereby they establish a minimax optimal rate (up to constants). Our technique relies on a combination of their methods with fluctuation results obtained in [20]. The latter are extended to the full critical regime. We find that the number of necessary observations depends on whether the interaction parameter between two blocks is positive or negative: In the first case, there are about $Nlog N$ observations required to exactly recover the block structure, while in the latter case $sqrt{N}log N$ observations suffice.




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Efficient estimation in expectile regression using envelope models

Tuo Chen, Zhihua Su, Yi Yang, Shanshan Ding.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 143--173.

Abstract:
As a generalization of the classical linear regression, expectile regression (ER) explores the relationship between the conditional expectile of a response variable and a set of predictor variables. ER with respect to different expectile levels can provide a comprehensive picture of the conditional distribution of the response variable given the predictors. We adopt an efficient estimation method called the envelope model ([8]) in ER, and construct a novel envelope expectile regression (EER) model. Estimation of the EER parameters can be performed using the generalized method of moments (GMM). We establish the consistency and derive the asymptotic distribution of the EER estimators. In addition, we show that the EER estimators are asymptotically more efficient than the ER estimators. Numerical experiments and real data examples are provided to demonstrate the efficiency gains attained by EER compared to ER, and the efficiency gains can further lead to improvements in prediction.




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Nonparametric false discovery rate control for identifying simultaneous signals

Sihai Dave Zhao, Yet Tien Nguyen.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 110--142.

Abstract:
It is frequently of interest to identify simultaneous signals, defined as features that exhibit statistical significance across each of several independent experiments. For example, genes that are consistently differentially expressed across experiments in different animal species can reveal evolutionarily conserved biological mechanisms. However, in some problems the test statistics corresponding to these features can have complicated or unknown null distributions. This paper proposes a novel nonparametric false discovery rate control procedure that can identify simultaneous signals even without knowing these null distributions. The method is shown, theoretically and in simulations, to asymptotically control the false discovery rate. It was also used to identify genes that were both differentially expressed and proximal to differentially accessible chromatin in the brains of mice exposed to a conspecific intruder. The proposed method is available in the R package github.com/sdzhao/ssa.




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Simultaneous transformation and rounding (STAR) models for integer-valued data

Daniel R. Kowal, Antonio Canale.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 1744--1772.

Abstract:
We propose a simple yet powerful framework for modeling integer-valued data, such as counts, scores, and rounded data. The data-generating process is defined by Simultaneously Transforming and Rounding (STAR) a continuous-valued process, which produces a flexible family of integer-valued distributions capable of modeling zero-inflation, bounded or censored data, and over- or underdispersion. The transformation is modeled as unknown for greater distributional flexibility, while the rounding operation ensures a coherent integer-valued data-generating process. An efficient MCMC algorithm is developed for posterior inference and provides a mechanism for adaptation of successful Bayesian models and algorithms for continuous data to the integer-valued data setting. Using the STAR framework, we design a new Bayesian Additive Regression Tree model for integer-valued data, which demonstrates impressive predictive distribution accuracy for both synthetic data and a large healthcare utilization dataset. For interpretable regression-based inference, we develop a STAR additive model, which offers greater flexibility and scalability than existing integer-valued models. The STAR additive model is applied to study the recent decline in Amazon river dolphins.




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Posterior contraction and credible sets for filaments of regression functions

Wei Li, Subhashis Ghosal.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 1707--1743.

Abstract:
A filament consists of local maximizers of a smooth function $f$ when moving in a certain direction. A filamentary structure is an important feature of the shape of an object and is also considered as an important lower dimensional characterization of multivariate data. There have been some recent theoretical studies of filaments in the nonparametric kernel density estimation context. This paper supplements the current literature in two ways. First, we provide a Bayesian approach to the filament estimation in regression context and study the posterior contraction rates using a finite random series of B-splines basis. Compared with the kernel-estimation method, this has a theoretical advantage as the bias can be better controlled when the function is smoother, which allows obtaining better rates. Assuming that $f:mathbb{R}^{2}mapsto mathbb{R}$ belongs to an isotropic Hölder class of order $alpha geq 4$, with the optimal choice of smoothing parameters, the posterior contraction rates for the filament points on some appropriately defined integral curves and for the Hausdorff distance of the filament are both $(n/log n)^{(2-alpha )/(2(1+alpha ))}$. Secondly, we provide a way to construct a credible set with sufficient frequentist coverage for the filaments. We demonstrate the success of our proposed method in simulations and one application to earthquake data.




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On change-point estimation under Sobolev sparsity

Aurélie Fischer, Dominique Picard.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 1648--1689.

Abstract:
In this paper, we consider the estimation of a change-point for possibly high-dimensional data in a Gaussian model, using a maximum likelihood method. We are interested in how dimension reduction can affect the performance of the method. We provide an estimator of the change-point that has a minimax rate of convergence, up to a logarithmic factor. The minimax rate is in fact composed of a fast rate —dimension-invariant— and a slow rate —increasing with the dimension. Moreover, it is proved that considering the case of sparse data, with a Sobolev regularity, there is a bound on the separation of the regimes above which there exists an optimal choice of dimension reduction, leading to the fast rate of estimation. We propose an adaptive dimension reduction procedure based on Lepski’s method and show that the resulting estimator attains the fast rate of convergence. Our results are then illustrated by a simulation study. In particular, practical strategies are suggested to perform dimension reduction.




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Estimating piecewise monotone signals

Kentaro Minami.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 1508--1576.

Abstract:
We study the problem of estimating piecewise monotone vectors. This problem can be seen as a generalization of the isotonic regression that allows a small number of order-violating changepoints. We focus mainly on the performance of the nearly-isotonic regression proposed by Tibshirani et al. (2011). We derive risk bounds for the nearly-isotonic regression estimators that are adaptive to piecewise monotone signals. The estimator achieves a near minimax convergence rate over certain classes of piecewise monotone signals under a weak assumption. Furthermore, we present an algorithm that can be applied to the nearly-isotonic type estimators on general weighted graphs. The simulation results suggest that the nearly-isotonic regression performs as well as the ideal estimator that knows the true positions of changepoints.




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A Bayesian approach to disease clustering using restricted Chinese restaurant processes

Claudia Wehrhahn, Samuel Leonard, Abel Rodriguez, Tatiana Xifara.

Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 1449--1478.

Abstract:
Identifying disease clusters (areas with an unusually high incidence of a particular disease) is a common problem in epidemiology and public health. We describe a Bayesian nonparametric mixture model for disease clustering that constrains clusters to be made of adjacent areal units. This is achieved by modifying the exchangeable partition probability function associated with the Ewen’s sampling distribution. We call the resulting prior the Restricted Chinese Restaurant Process, as the associated full conditional distributions resemble those associated with the standard Chinese Restaurant Process. The model is illustrated using synthetic data sets and in an application to oral cancer mortality in Germany.