pro Making the connection : health care needs of drug using prostitutes : information pack / by Jean Faugier and Steve Cranfield. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: [Manchester] : School of Nursing Studies, University of Manchester, [1995?] Full Article
pro Policy and guidelines for the provision of needle and syringe exchange services to young people / Tom Aldridge and Andrew Preston. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: [Dorchester] : Dorset Community NHS Trust, 1997. Full Article
pro O problema do abuso de drogas prevenção através investigação, pesquisa e educação / Murillo de Macedo Pereira, Vera Kühn de Macedo Pereira. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: São Paulo : Governo do Estado de Sao Paulo, Secretaria da Segurança Pública, 1975. Full Article
pro A pesquisa sobre o problema do abuso de drogas / Murillo de Macedo Pereira. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: São Paulo : Serviço Grafíco da Secretaria da Segurança Pública, 1976. Full Article
pro Evaluation of the 'progress' pilot projects "from recovery into work" / by Stephen Burniston, Jo Cutter, Neil Shaw, Michael Dodd. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: York : York Consulting, 2001. Full Article
pro The university chemical dependency project : final report : November 1 1986 / Steven A. Bloch, Steven Ungerleider. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: [Indiana] : Integrated Research Services, Inc., 1986. Full Article
pro प्रजनन स्वास्थ्य के मामले : Reproductive health matters. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: London : Reproductive Health Matters, 1993-2018. Full Article
pro 生殖健康问题 : Reproductive health matters. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: London : Reproductive Health Matters, 1993-2018. Full Article
pro проблемы репродуктивного здоровья : reproductive health matters. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: London : Reproductive Health Matters, 1993-2018. Full Article
pro Temas de salud reproductiva : Reproductive health matters. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: London : Reproductive Health Matters, 1993-2018. Full Article
pro Questions de santé reproductive : Reproductive health matters. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: London : Reproductive Health Matters, 1993-2018. Full Article
pro Questões de saúde reprodutiva : Reproductive health matters. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: London : Reproductive Health Matters, 1993-2018. Full Article
pro Proceedings of the Parapsychological Association. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: Durham, North Carolina : [Duke Station, 1957-[197-?] Full Article
pro WNBA Draft Profile: Transcendent guard Sabrina Ionescu projects as top pick By sports.yahoo.com Published On :: Thu, 09 Apr 2020 20:09:19 GMT After sweeping every national player of the year award, Sabrina Ionescu is off to the WNBA level where her skills will make an instant impact — not just to her new team but the league as a whole. She averaged 17.5 points, 8.6 rebounds and 9.1 assists for the Ducks in 2019-20, rewriting her own NCAA career triple-double record and becoming the first in college basketball history with at least 2,000 points, 1,000 rebounds and 1,000 assists. Full Article video Sports
pro WNBA Draft Profile: Versatile forward Satou Sabally can provide instant impact By sports.yahoo.com Published On :: Thu, 09 Apr 2020 20:42:49 GMT Athletic forward Satou Sabally is preparing to take the leap to the WNBA level following three productive seasons at Oregon. As a junior, she averaged 16.2 points and 6.9 rebounds per game while helping the Ducks sweep the Pac-12 regular season and tournament titles. At 6-foot-4, she also drained 45 3-pointers for Oregon in 2019-20 while notching a career-best average of 2.3 assists per game. Full Article video Sports
pro WNBA Draft Profile: Productive forward Ruthy Hebard has uncanny handling, scoring, rebounding ability By sports.yahoo.com Published On :: Thu, 09 Apr 2020 21:52:59 GMT Ruthy Hebard, who ranks 2nd in Oregon history in points (2,368) and 3rd in rebounds (1,299), prepares to play in the WNBA following four years in Eugene. Hebard is the Oregon and Pac-12 all-time leader in career field-goal percentage (65.1) and averaged 17.3 points per game and a career-high 9.6 rebounds per game as a senior. Full Article video Sports
pro WNBA Draft Profile: Do-it-all OSU talent Mikayla Pivec has her sights set on a pro breakout By sports.yahoo.com Published On :: Fri, 10 Apr 2020 16:39:53 GMT 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. Full Article video Sports
pro WNBA Draft Profile: UCLA guard Japreece Dean ready to lead at the next level By sports.yahoo.com Published On :: Fri, 10 Apr 2020 16:40:28 GMT UCLA guard Japreece Dean is primed to shine at the next level as she heads to the WNBA Draft in April. The do-it-all point-woman was an All-Pac-12 honoree last season, and one of only seven D-1 hoopers with at least 13 points and 5.5 assists per game. Full Article video Sports
pro Oregon's Ionescu looks forward to pro career in the WNBA By sports.yahoo.com Published On :: Tue, 14 Apr 2020 23:17:13 GMT With the spotlight on her growing ever brighter, Sabrina Ionescu is aware she's becoming her own brand. One of the most decorated players in women's college basketball, Ionescu is about to go pro with the WNBA draft coming up Friday. Ionescu said Oregon has prepared her to understand how much impact she can have in the community and on women's basketball. Full Article article Sports
pro Recovery of simultaneous low rank and two-way sparse coefficient matrices, a nonconvex approach By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 22:00 EDT 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. Full Article
pro Asymptotic properties of the maximum likelihood and cross validation estimators for transformed Gaussian processes By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 22:02 EDT 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. Full Article
pro Perspective maximum likelihood-type estimation via proximal decomposition By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 22:02 EDT 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. Full Article
pro Estimation of linear projections of non-sparse coefficients in high-dimensional regression By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 22:02 EDT 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. Full Article
pro A Bayesian approach to disease clustering using restricted Chinese restaurant processes By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Wed, 08 Apr 2020 22:01 EDT 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. Full Article
pro A general drift estimation procedure for stochastic differential equations with additive fractional noise By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Tue, 25 Feb 2020 22:00 EST Fabien Panloup, Samy Tindel, Maylis Varvenne. Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 1075--1136.Abstract: In this paper we consider the drift estimation problem for a general differential equation driven by an additive multidimensional fractional Brownian motion, under ergodic assumptions on the drift coefficient. Our estimation procedure is based on the identification of the invariant measure, and we provide consistency results as well as some information about the convergence rate. We also give some examples of coefficients for which the identifiability assumption for the invariant measure is satisfied. Full Article
pro Testing goodness of fit for point processes via topological data analysis By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 24 Feb 2020 04:00 EST Christophe A. N. Biscio, Nicolas Chenavier, Christian Hirsch, Anne Marie Svane. Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 1024--1074.Abstract: We introduce tests for the goodness of fit of point patterns via methods from topological data analysis. More precisely, the persistent Betti numbers give rise to a bivariate functional summary statistic for observed point patterns that is asymptotically Gaussian in large observation windows. We analyze the power of tests derived from this statistic on simulated point patterns and compare its performance with global envelope tests. Finally, we apply the tests to a point pattern from an application context in neuroscience. As the main methodological contribution, we derive sufficient conditions for a functional central limit theorem on bounded persistent Betti numbers of point processes with exponential decay of correlations. Full Article
pro On the distribution, model selection properties and uniqueness of the Lasso estimator in low and high dimensions By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 17 Feb 2020 22:06 EST Karl Ewald, Ulrike Schneider. Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 944--969.Abstract: We derive expressions for the finite-sample distribution of the Lasso estimator in the context of a linear regression model in low as well as in high dimensions by exploiting the structure of the optimization problem defining the estimator. In low dimensions, we assume full rank of the regressor matrix and present expressions for the cumulative distribution function as well as the densities of the absolutely continuous parts of the estimator. Our results are presented for the case of normally distributed errors, but do not hinge on this assumption and can easily be generalized. Additionally, we establish an explicit formula for the correspondence between the Lasso and the least-squares estimator. We derive analogous results for the distribution in less explicit form in high dimensions where we make no assumptions on the regressor matrix at all. In this setting, we also investigate the model selection properties of the Lasso and show that possibly only a subset of models might be selected by the estimator, completely independently of the observed response vector. Finally, we present a condition for uniqueness of the estimator that is necessary as well as sufficient. Full Article
pro Reduction problems and deformation approaches to nonstationary covariance functions over spheres By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Tue, 11 Feb 2020 22:03 EST Emilio Porcu, Rachid Senoussi, Enner Mendoza, Moreno Bevilacqua. Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 890--916.Abstract: The paper considers reduction problems and deformation approaches for nonstationary covariance functions on the $(d-1)$-dimensional spheres, $mathbb{S}^{d-1}$, embedded in the $d$-dimensional Euclidean space. Given a covariance function $C$ on $mathbb{S}^{d-1}$, we chase a pair $(R,Psi)$, for a function $R:[-1,+1] o mathbb{R}$ and a smooth bijection $Psi$, such that $C$ can be reduced to a geodesically isotropic one: $C(mathbf{x},mathbf{y})=R(langle Psi (mathbf{x}),Psi (mathbf{y}) angle )$, with $langle cdot ,cdot angle $ denoting the dot product. The problem finds motivation in recent statistical literature devoted to the analysis of global phenomena, defined typically over the sphere of $mathbb{R}^{3}$. The application domains considered in the manuscript makes the problem mathematically challenging. We show the uniqueness of the representation in the reduction problem. Then, under some regularity assumptions, we provide an inversion formula to recover the bijection $Psi$, when it exists, for a given $C$. We also give sufficient conditions for reducibility. Full Article
pro Estimation of a semiparametric transformation model: A novel approach based on least squares minimization By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Tue, 04 Feb 2020 22:03 EST Benjamin Colling, Ingrid Van Keilegom. Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 769--800.Abstract: Consider the following semiparametric transformation model $Lambda_{ heta }(Y)=m(X)+varepsilon $, where $X$ is a $d$-dimensional covariate, $Y$ is a univariate response variable and $varepsilon $ is an error term with zero mean and independent of $X$. We assume that $m$ is an unknown regression function and that ${Lambda _{ heta }: heta inTheta }$ is a parametric family of strictly increasing functions. Our goal is to develop two new estimators of the transformation parameter $ heta $. The main idea of these two estimators is to minimize, with respect to $ heta $, the $L_{2}$-distance between the transformation $Lambda _{ heta }$ and one of its fully nonparametric estimators. We consider in particular the nonparametric estimator based on the least-absolute deviation loss constructed in Colling and Van Keilegom (2019). We establish the consistency and the asymptotic normality of the two proposed estimators of $ heta $. We also carry out a simulation study to illustrate and compare the performance of our new parametric estimators to that of the profile likelihood estimator constructed in Linton et al. (2008). Full Article
pro Profile likelihood biclustering By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Fri, 31 Jan 2020 04:01 EST Cheryl Flynn, Patrick Perry. Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 731--768.Abstract: Biclustering, the process of simultaneously clustering the rows and columns of a data matrix, is a popular and effective tool for finding structure in a high-dimensional dataset. Many biclustering procedures appear to work well in practice, but most do not have associated consistency guarantees. To address this shortcoming, we propose a new biclustering procedure based on profile likelihood. The procedure applies to a broad range of data modalities, including binary, count, and continuous observations. We prove that the procedure recovers the true row and column classes when the dimensions of the data matrix tend to infinity, even if the functional form of the data distribution is misspecified. The procedure requires computing a combinatorial search, which can be expensive in practice. Rather than performing this search directly, we propose a new heuristic optimization procedure based on the Kernighan-Lin heuristic, which has nice computational properties and performs well in simulations. We demonstrate our procedure with applications to congressional voting records, and microarray analysis. Full Article
pro A Statistical Learning Approach to Modal Regression By Published On :: 2020 This paper studies the nonparametric modal regression problem systematically from a statistical learning viewpoint. Originally motivated by pursuing a theoretical understanding of the maximum correntropy criterion based regression (MCCR), our study reveals that MCCR with a tending-to-zero scale parameter is essentially modal regression. We show that the nonparametric modal regression problem can be approached via the classical empirical risk minimization. Some efforts are then made to develop a framework for analyzing and implementing modal regression. For instance, the modal regression function is described, the modal regression risk is defined explicitly and its Bayes rule is characterized; for the sake of computational tractability, the surrogate modal regression risk, which is termed as the generalization risk in our study, is introduced. On the theoretical side, the excess modal regression risk, the excess generalization risk, the function estimation error, and the relations among the above three quantities are studied rigorously. It turns out that under mild conditions, function estimation consistency and convergence may be pursued in modal regression as in vanilla regression protocols such as mean regression, median regression, and quantile regression. On the practical side, the implementation issues of modal regression including the computational algorithm and the selection of the tuning parameters are discussed. Numerical validations on modal regression are also conducted to verify our findings. Full Article
pro Target Propagation in Recurrent Neural Networks By Published On :: 2020 Recurrent Neural Networks have been widely used to process sequence data, but have long been criticized for their biological implausibility and training difficulties related to vanishing and exploding gradients. This paper presents a novel algorithm for training recurrent networks, target propagation through time (TPTT), that outperforms standard backpropagation through time (BPTT) on four out of the five problems used for testing. The proposed algorithm is initially tested and compared to BPTT on four synthetic time lag tasks, and its performance is also measured using the sequential MNIST data set. In addition, as TPTT uses target propagation, it allows for discrete nonlinearities and could potentially mitigate the credit assignment problem in more complex recurrent architectures. Full Article
pro Generalized probabilistic principal component analysis of correlated data By Published On :: 2020 Principal component analysis (PCA) is a well-established tool in machine learning and data processing. The principal axes in PCA were shown to be equivalent to the maximum marginal likelihood estimator of the factor loading matrix in a latent factor model for the observed data, assuming that the latent factors are independently distributed as standard normal distributions. However, the independence assumption may be unrealistic for many scenarios such as modeling multiple time series, spatial processes, and functional data, where the outcomes are correlated. In this paper, we introduce the generalized probabilistic principal component analysis (GPPCA) to study the latent factor model for multiple correlated outcomes, where each factor is modeled by a Gaussian process. Our method generalizes the previous probabilistic formulation of PCA (PPCA) by providing the closed-form maximum marginal likelihood estimator of the factor loadings and other parameters. Based on the explicit expression of the precision matrix in the marginal likelihood that we derived, the number of the computational operations is linear to the number of output variables. Furthermore, we also provide the closed-form expression of the marginal likelihood when other covariates are included in the mean structure. We highlight the advantage of GPPCA in terms of the practical relevance, estimation accuracy and computational convenience. Numerical studies of simulated and real data confirm the excellent finite-sample performance of the proposed approach. Full Article
pro Perturbation Bounds for Procrustes, Classical Scaling, and Trilateration, with Applications to Manifold Learning By Published On :: 2020 One of the common tasks in unsupervised learning is dimensionality reduction, where the goal is to find meaningful low-dimensional structures hidden in high-dimensional data. Sometimes referred to as manifold learning, this problem is closely related to the problem of localization, which aims at embedding a weighted graph into a low-dimensional Euclidean space. Several methods have been proposed for localization, and also manifold learning. Nonetheless, the robustness property of most of them is little understood. In this paper, we obtain perturbation bounds for classical scaling and trilateration, which are then applied to derive performance bounds for Isomap, Landmark Isomap, and Maximum Variance Unfolding. A new perturbation bound for procrustes analysis plays a key role. Full Article
pro Expectation Propagation as a Way of Life: A Framework for Bayesian Inference on Partitioned Data By Published On :: 2020 A common divide-and-conquer approach for Bayesian computation with big data is to partition the data, perform local inference for each piece separately, and combine the results to obtain a global posterior approximation. While being conceptually and computationally appealing, this method involves the problematic need to also split the prior for the local inferences; these weakened priors may not provide enough regularization for each separate computation, thus eliminating one of the key advantages of Bayesian methods. To resolve this dilemma while still retaining the generalizability of the underlying local inference method, we apply the idea of expectation propagation (EP) as a framework for distributed Bayesian inference. The central idea is to iteratively update approximations to the local likelihoods given the state of the other approximations and the prior. The present paper has two roles: we review the steps that are needed to keep EP algorithms numerically stable, and we suggest a general approach, inspired by EP, for approaching data partitioning problems in a way that achieves the computational benefits of parallelism while allowing each local update to make use of relevant information from the other sites. In addition, we demonstrate how the method can be applied in a hierarchical context to make use of partitioning of both data and parameters. The paper describes a general algorithmic framework, rather than a specific algorithm, and presents an example implementation for it. Full Article
pro Convergences of Regularized Algorithms and Stochastic Gradient Methods with Random Projections By Published On :: 2020 We study the least-squares regression problem over a Hilbert space, covering nonparametric regression over a reproducing kernel Hilbert space as a special case. We first investigate regularized algorithms adapted to a projection operator on a closed subspace of the Hilbert space. We prove convergence results with respect to variants of norms, under a capacity assumption on the hypothesis space and a regularity condition on the target function. As a result, we obtain optimal rates for regularized algorithms with randomized sketches, provided that the sketch dimension is proportional to the effective dimension up to a logarithmic factor. As a byproduct, we obtain similar results for Nystr"{o}m regularized algorithms. Our results provide optimal, distribution-dependent rates that do not have any saturation effect for sketched/Nystr"{o}m regularized algorithms, considering both the attainable and non-attainable cases, in the well-conditioned regimes. We then study stochastic gradient methods with projection over the subspace, allowing multi-pass over the data and minibatches, and we derive similar optimal statistical convergence results. Full Article
pro GluonCV and GluonNLP: Deep Learning in Computer Vision and Natural Language Processing By Published On :: 2020 We present GluonCV and GluonNLP, the deep learning toolkits for computer vision and natural language processing based on Apache MXNet (incubating). These toolkits provide state-of-the-art pre-trained models, training scripts, and training logs, to facilitate rapid prototyping and promote reproducible research. We also provide modular APIs with flexible building blocks to enable efficient customization. Leveraging the MXNet ecosystem, the deep learning models in GluonCV and GluonNLP can be deployed onto a variety of platforms with different programming languages. The Apache 2.0 license has been adopted by GluonCV and GluonNLP to allow for software distribution, modification, and usage. Full Article
pro Provably robust estimation of modulo 1 samples of a smooth function with applications to phase unwrapping By Published On :: 2020 Consider an unknown smooth function $f: [0,1]^d ightarrow mathbb{R}$, and assume we are given $n$ noisy mod 1 samples of $f$, i.e., $y_i = (f(x_i) + eta_i) mod 1$, for $x_i in [0,1]^d$, where $eta_i$ denotes the noise. Given the samples $(x_i,y_i)_{i=1}^{n}$, our goal is to recover smooth, robust estimates of the clean samples $f(x_i) mod 1$. We formulate a natural approach for solving this problem, which works with angular embeddings of the noisy mod 1 samples over the unit circle, inspired by the angular synchronization framework. This amounts to solving a smoothness regularized least-squares problem -- a quadratically constrained quadratic program (QCQP) -- where the variables are constrained to lie on the unit circle. Our proposed approach is based on solving its relaxation, which is a trust-region sub-problem and hence solvable efficiently. We provide theoretical guarantees demonstrating its robustness to noise for adversarial, as well as random Gaussian and Bernoulli noise models. To the best of our knowledge, these are the first such theoretical results for this problem. We demonstrate the robustness and efficiency of our proposed approach via extensive numerical simulations on synthetic data, along with a simple least-squares based solution for the unwrapping stage, that recovers the original samples of $f$ (up to a global shift). It is shown to perform well at high levels of noise, when taking as input the denoised modulo $1$ samples. Finally, we also consider two other approaches for denoising the modulo 1 samples that leverage tools from Riemannian optimization on manifolds, including a Burer-Monteiro approach for a semidefinite programming relaxation of our formulation. For the two-dimensional version of the problem, which has applications in synthetic aperture radar interferometry (InSAR), we are able to solve instances of real-world data with a million sample points in under 10 seconds, on a personal laptop. Full Article
pro Sparse and low-rank multivariate Hawkes processes By Published On :: 2020 We consider the problem of unveiling the implicit network structure of node interactions (such as user interactions in a social network), based only on high-frequency timestamps. Our inference is based on the minimization of the least-squares loss associated with a multivariate Hawkes model, penalized by $ell_1$ and trace norm of the interaction tensor. We provide a first theoretical analysis for this problem, that includes sparsity and low-rank inducing penalizations. This result involves a new data-driven concentration inequality for matrix martingales in continuous time with observable variance, which is a result of independent interest and a broad range of possible applications since it extends to matrix martingales former results restricted to the scalar case. A consequence of our analysis is the construction of sharply tuned $ell_1$ and trace-norm penalizations, that leads to a data-driven scaling of the variability of information available for each users. Numerical experiments illustrate the significant improvements achieved by the use of such data-driven penalizations. Full Article
pro Scalable Approximate MCMC Algorithms for the Horseshoe Prior By Published On :: 2020 The horseshoe prior is frequently employed in Bayesian analysis of high-dimensional models, and has been shown to achieve minimax optimal risk properties when the truth is sparse. While optimization-based algorithms for the extremely popular Lasso and elastic net procedures can scale to dimension in the hundreds of thousands, algorithms for the horseshoe that use Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) for computation are limited to problems an order of magnitude smaller. This is due to high computational cost per step and growth of the variance of time-averaging estimators as a function of dimension. We propose two new MCMC algorithms for computation in these models that have significantly improved performance compared to existing alternatives. One of the algorithms also approximates an expensive matrix product to give orders of magnitude speedup in high-dimensional applications. We prove guarantees for the accuracy of the approximate algorithm, and show that gradually decreasing the approximation error as the chain extends results in an exact algorithm. The scalability of the algorithm is illustrated in simulations with problem size as large as $N=5,000$ observations and $p=50,000$ predictors, and an application to a genome-wide association study with $N=2,267$ and $p=98,385$. The empirical results also show that the new algorithm yields estimates with lower mean squared error, intervals with better coverage, and elucidates features of the posterior that were often missed by previous algorithms in high dimensions, including bimodality of posterior marginals indicating uncertainty about which covariates belong in the model. Full Article
pro Cook commemoration sparks 1970 protest By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 28 Apr 2020 04:52:55 +0000 In 1970, celebrations and commemorations were held across the nation for the 200th anniversary of the Endeavour’s visit Full Article
pro Mosquito Control Program By www.eastgwillimbury.ca Published On :: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 21:14:52 GMT Full Article
pro Branching random walks with uncountably many extinction probability vectors By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 04:00 EDT Daniela Bertacchi, Fabio Zucca. Source: Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics, Volume 34, Number 2, 426--438.Abstract: Given a branching random walk on a set $X$, we study its extinction probability vectors $mathbf{q}(cdot,A)$. Their components are the probability that the process goes extinct in a fixed $Asubseteq X$, when starting from a vertex $xin X$. The set of extinction probability vectors (obtained letting $A$ vary among all subsets of $X$) is a subset of the set of the fixed points of the generating function of the branching random walk. In particular here we are interested in the cardinality of the set of extinction probability vectors. We prove results which allow to understand whether the probability of extinction in a set $A$ is different from the one of extinction in another set $B$. In many cases there are only two possible extinction probability vectors and so far, in more complicated examples, only a finite number of distinct extinction probability vectors had been explicitly found. Whether a branching random walk could have an infinite number of distinct extinction probability vectors was not known. We apply our results to construct examples of branching random walks with uncountably many distinct extinction probability vectors. Full Article
pro Reliability estimation in a multicomponent stress-strength model for Burr XII distribution under progressive censoring By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 04:00 EDT Raj Kamal Maurya, Yogesh Mani Tripathi. Source: Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics, Volume 34, Number 2, 345--369.Abstract: We consider estimation of the multicomponent stress-strength reliability under progressive Type II censoring under the assumption that stress and strength variables follow Burr XII distributions with a common shape parameter. Maximum likelihood estimates of the reliability are obtained along with asymptotic intervals when common shape parameter may be known or unknown. Bayes estimates are also derived under the squared error loss function using different approximation methods. Further, we obtain exact Bayes and uniformly minimum variance unbiased estimates of the reliability for the case common shape parameter is known. The highest posterior density intervals are also obtained. We perform Monte Carlo simulations to compare the performance of proposed estimates and present a discussion based on this study. Finally, two real data sets are analyzed for illustration purposes. Full Article
pro Symmetrical and asymmetrical mixture autoregressive processes By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 04:00 EDT Mohsen Maleki, Arezo Hajrajabi, Reinaldo B. Arellano-Valle. Source: Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics, Volume 34, Number 2, 273--290.Abstract: In this paper, we study the finite mixtures of autoregressive processes assuming that the distribution of innovations (errors) belongs to the class of scale mixture of skew-normal (SMSN) distributions. The SMSN distributions allow a simultaneous modeling of the existence of outliers, heavy tails and asymmetries in the distribution of innovations. Therefore, a statistical methodology based on the SMSN family allows us to use a robust modeling on some non-linear time series with great flexibility, to accommodate skewness, heavy tails and heterogeneity simultaneously. The existence of convenient hierarchical representations of the SMSN distributions facilitates also the implementation of an ECME-type of algorithm to perform the likelihood inference in the considered model. Simulation studies and the application to a real data set are finally presented to illustrate the usefulness of the proposed model. Full Article
pro Random environment binomial thinning integer-valued autoregressive process with Poisson or geometric marginal By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 04:00 EDT Zhengwei Liu, Qi Li, Fukang Zhu. Source: Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics, Volume 34, Number 2, 251--272.Abstract: To predict time series of counts with small values and remarkable fluctuations, an available model is the $r$ states random environment process based on the negative binomial thinning operator and the geometric marginal. However, we argue that the aforementioned model may suffer from the following two drawbacks. First, under the condition of no prior information, the overdispersed property of the geometric distribution may cause the predictions fluctuate greatly. Second, because of the constraints on the model parameters, some estimated parameters are close to zero in real-data examples, which may not objectively reveal the correlation relationship. For the first drawback, an $r$ states random environment process based on the binomial thinning operator and the Poisson marginal is introduced. For the second drawback, we propose a generalized $r$ states random environment integer-valued autoregressive model based on the binomial thinning operator to model fluctuations of data. Yule–Walker and conditional maximum likelihood estimates are considered and their performances are assessed via simulation studies. Two real-data sets are conducted to illustrate the better performances of the proposed models compared with some existing models. Full Article
pro Multivariate normal approximation of the maximum likelihood estimator via the delta method By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 03 Feb 2020 04:00 EST Andreas Anastasiou, Robert E. Gaunt. Source: Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics, Volume 34, Number 1, 136--149.Abstract: We use the delta method and Stein’s method to derive, under regularity conditions, explicit upper bounds for the distributional distance between the distribution of the maximum likelihood estimator (MLE) of a $d$-dimensional parameter and its asymptotic multivariate normal distribution. Our bounds apply in situations in which the MLE can be written as a function of a sum of i.i.d. $t$-dimensional random vectors. We apply our general bound to establish a bound for the multivariate normal approximation of the MLE of the normal distribution with unknown mean and variance. Full Article
pro Effects of gene–environment and gene–gene interactions in case-control studies: A novel Bayesian semiparametric approach By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 03 Feb 2020 04:00 EST Durba Bhattacharya, Sourabh Bhattacharya. Source: Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics, Volume 34, Number 1, 71--89.Abstract: Present day bio-medical research is pointing towards the fact that cognizance of gene–environment interactions along with genetic interactions may help prevent or detain the onset of many complex diseases like cardiovascular disease, cancer, type2 diabetes, autism or asthma by adjustments to lifestyle. In this regard, we propose a Bayesian semiparametric model to detect not only the roles of genes and their interactions, but also the possible influence of environmental variables on the genes in case-control studies. Our model also accounts for the unknown number of genetic sub-populations via finite mixtures composed of Dirichlet processes. An effective parallel computing methodology, developed by us harnesses the power of parallel processing technology to increase the efficiencies of our conditionally independent Gibbs sampling and Transformation based MCMC (TMCMC) methods. Applications of our model and methods to simulation studies with biologically realistic genotype datasets and a real, case-control based genotype dataset on early onset of myocardial infarction (MI) have yielded quite interesting results beside providing some insights into the differential effect of gender on MI. Full Article
pro A joint mean-correlation modeling approach for longitudinal zero-inflated count data By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 03 Feb 2020 04:00 EST Weiping Zhang, Jiangli Wang, Fang Qian, Yu Chen. Source: Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics, Volume 34, Number 1, 35--50.Abstract: Longitudinal zero-inflated count data are widely encountered in many fields, while modeling the correlation between measurements for the same subject is more challenge due to the lack of suitable multivariate joint distributions. This paper studies a novel mean-correlation modeling approach for longitudinal zero-inflated regression model, solving both problems of specifying joint distribution and parsimoniously modeling correlations with no constraint. The joint distribution of zero-inflated discrete longitudinal responses is modeled by a copula model whose correlation parameters are innovatively represented in hyper-spherical coordinates. To overcome the computational intractability in maximizing the full likelihood function of the model, we further propose a computationally efficient pairwise likelihood approach. We then propose separated mean and correlation regression models to model these key quantities, such modeling approach can also handle irregularly and possibly subject-specific times points. The resulting estimators are shown to be consistent and asymptotically normal. Data example and simulations support the effectiveness of the proposed approach. Full Article
pro Subjective Bayesian testing using calibrated prior probabilities By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 26 Aug 2019 04:00 EDT Dan J. Spitzner. Source: Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics, Volume 33, Number 4, 861--893.Abstract: This article proposes a calibration scheme for Bayesian testing that coordinates analytically-derived statistical performance considerations with expert opinion. In other words, the scheme is effective and meaningful for incorporating objective elements into subjective Bayesian inference. It explores a novel role for default priors as anchors for calibration rather than substitutes for prior knowledge. Ideas are developed for use with multiplicity adjustments in multiple-model contexts, and to address the issue of prior sensitivity of Bayes factors. Along the way, the performance properties of an existing multiplicity adjustment related to the Poisson distribution are clarified theoretically. Connections of the overall calibration scheme to the Schwarz criterion are also explored. The proposed framework is examined and illustrated on a number of existing data sets related to problems in clinical trials, forensic pattern matching, and log-linear models methodology. Full Article