fun Kansas Supreme Court Approves Law to Fund Schools But Keeps Case Open By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 16 Jul 2019 00:00:00 +0000 Kansas' highest court has declared that the state finally is spending enough money on its public schools under a new education funding law but refused to end a lawsuit filed nearly a decade ago because it wants to monitor future funding by the legislature. Full Article Kansas
fun Die Behandlung der hysterie der Neurasthenie und ähnlicher allgemeiner functioneller Neurosen / von V. Holst. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Stuttgart : F. Enke, 1883. Full Article
fun Die Bekämpfung der Infectionskrankheiten : Hygienischer Theil / von Oberingenieur Brix, Professor Dr. Pfuhl und Hafenarzt Dr. Nocht ; herausgegeben von Stabsarzt Professor Dr. Behring. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Leipzig : G. Thieme, 1894. Full Article
fun Die functionen des centralnervensystems und ihre phylogenese / von J. Steiner. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Braunschweig : Druck und Verlag von Friedrich Vieweg und Sohn, 1898. Full Article
fun Die Functionsstörungen des Grosshirnes / von A. Adamkiewicz. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Hannover : Köllner, 1898. Full Article
fun Die funktionellen Neurosen beim weiblichen Geschlecht und ihre Beziehungen zu den Sexualleiden. / von Dr. Uherek. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Berlin : Heuser, 1888. Full Article
fun Die Hundestaupe : ihre Vorbeugung und Behandlung durch Impfung / von Friedrich Richter. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Dessau : Rot, 1908. Full Article
fun Die Infections-Krankheiten, ihre Entstehung, ihr Wesen und ihre Bekampfung : fur Aerzte und Verwaltungs-Beamte / von W. Plange. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Berlin : S. Karger, 1894. Full Article
fun Die Prüfung der im Handel vorkommenden Gewebe durch das Mikroskop und durch chemische Reagentien / von Hermann Schacht. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Berlin : G.W.F. Muller, 1853. Full Article
fun Die Prüfung des Farbensinnes beim Eisenbahn- und Marinepersonal. Neue Folge. 1. Lieferung. Tafeln zur Bestimmung der Roth-Grünblindheit / von Dr. J. Stilling. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Cassel : T. Fischer, 1878. Full Article
fun Die soziale Bekämpfung der Tuberkulose als Volkskrankheit in Europa und Amerika. Denkschrift, der Tuberkulose-Kommission der Pirogoff-Gesellschaft Russischer Aerzte vorgelegt und dem VIII. Pirogoff-Aerztekongress gewidmet / von Philipp M.Blumenthal. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Berlin : Hirschwald, 1905. Full Article
fun An elementary treatise on the function of vision and its anomalies / by Dr. Giraud-Teulon ; translated from the second French edition by Lloyd Owen. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: London : Bailliere, Tindall, & Cox, 1880. Full Article
fun Mississippi: No Public Funds For Superintendents' Group By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 07 Jun 2016 00:00:00 +0000 State lawmakers have made it illegal for school districts to spend any public money on the Mississippi Association of School Superintendents, saying district leaders personally attacked state officials while they were seeking votes for a school funding initiative last year. Full Article Mississippi
fun An ensemble of Burmese musicians playing traditional instruments at a local funeral. Wood engraving after H.G. Robley. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Full Article
fun An ensemble of Burmese musicians playing traditional instruments at a local funeral. Wood engraving after H.G. Robley. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Full Article
fun Plaintiffs say education-funding lawsuit still necessary By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 28 Apr 2020 00:00:00 +0000 Full Article New_Mexico
fun These #HockeyAtHome videos are ridiculously fun and creative By sports.yahoo.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 15:37:24 GMT NHL fans have to stay busy somehow, right? Their HockeyAtHome videos are almost too good to be true. By Brooke Destra Full Article article Sports
fun Administrative scheme for the County of London made by the London County Council on 18th December, 1934, for discharging the functions transferred to the Council by Part I of the Local Government Act, 1929, and orders made bu the Minister of Health under By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: England : London County Council, Public Assistance Department, 1935. Full Article
fun Opiate receptor subtypes and brain function / editors, Roger M. Brown, Doris H. Clouet, David P. Friedman. By search.wellcomelibrary.org Published On :: Rockville, Maryland : National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1986. Full Article
fun Posterior contraction and credible sets for filaments of regression functions By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Tue, 14 Apr 2020 22:01 EDT 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. Full Article
fun Sparsely observed functional time series: estimation and prediction By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Thu, 27 Feb 2020 22:04 EST Tomáš Rubín, Victor M. Panaretos. Source: Electronic Journal of Statistics, Volume 14, Number 1, 1137--1210.Abstract: Functional time series analysis, whether based on time or frequency domain methodology, has traditionally been carried out under the assumption of complete observation of the constituent series of curves, assumed stationary. Nevertheless, as is often the case with independent functional data, it may well happen that the data available to the analyst are not the actual sequence of curves, but relatively few and noisy measurements per curve, potentially at different locations in each curve’s domain. Under this sparse sampling regime, neither the established estimators of the time series’ dynamics nor their corresponding theoretical analysis will apply. The subject of this paper is to tackle the problem of estimating the dynamics and of recovering the latent process of smooth curves in the sparse regime. Assuming smoothness of the latent curves, we construct a consistent nonparametric estimator of the series’ spectral density operator and use it to develop a frequency-domain recovery approach, that predicts the latent curve at a given time by borrowing strength from the (estimated) dynamic correlations in the series across time. This new methodology is seen to comprehensively outperform a naive recovery approach that would ignore temporal dependence and use only methodology employed in the i.i.d. setting and hinging on the lag zero covariance. Further to predicting the latent curves from their noisy point samples, the method fills in gaps in the sequence (curves nowhere sampled), denoises the data, and serves as a basis for forecasting. Means of providing corresponding confidence bands are also investigated. A simulation study interestingly suggests that sparse observation for a longer time period may provide better performance than dense observation for a shorter period, in the presence of smoothness. The methodology is further illustrated by application to an environmental data set on fair-weather atmospheric electricity, which naturally leads to a sparse functional time series. Full Article
fun 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
fun On Mahalanobis Distance in Functional Settings By Published On :: 2020 Mahalanobis distance is a classical tool in multivariate analysis. We suggest here an extension of this concept to the case of functional data. More precisely, the proposed definition concerns those statistical problems where the sample data are real functions defined on a compact interval of the real line. The obvious difficulty for such a functional extension is the non-invertibility of the covariance operator in infinite-dimensional cases. Unlike other recent proposals, our definition is suggested and motivated in terms of the Reproducing Kernel Hilbert Space (RKHS) associated with the stochastic process that generates the data. The proposed distance is a true metric; it depends on a unique real smoothing parameter which is fully motivated in RKHS terms. Moreover, it shares some properties of its finite dimensional counterpart: it is invariant under isometries, it can be consistently estimated from the data and its sampling distribution is known under Gaussian models. An empirical study for two statistical applications, outliers detection and binary classification, is included. The results are quite competitive when compared to other recent proposals in the literature. Full Article
fun 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
fun A Convex Parametrization of a New Class of Universal Kernel Functions By Published On :: 2020 The accuracy and complexity of kernel learning algorithms is determined by the set of kernels over which it is able to optimize. An ideal set of kernels should: admit a linear parameterization (tractability); be dense in the set of all kernels (accuracy); and every member should be universal so that the hypothesis space is infinite-dimensional (scalability). Currently, there is no class of kernel that meets all three criteria - e.g. Gaussians are not tractable or accurate; polynomials are not scalable. We propose a new class that meet all three criteria - the Tessellated Kernel (TK) class. Specifically, the TK class: admits a linear parameterization using positive matrices; is dense in all kernels; and every element in the class is universal. This implies that the use of TK kernels for learning the kernel can obviate the need for selecting candidate kernels in algorithms such as SimpleMKL and parameters such as the bandwidth. Numerical testing on soft margin Support Vector Machine (SVM) problems show that algorithms using TK kernels outperform other kernel learning algorithms and neural networks. Furthermore, our results show that when the ratio of the number of training data to features is high, the improvement of TK over MKL increases significantly. Full Article
fun Fast Rates for General Unbounded Loss Functions: From ERM to Generalized Bayes By Published On :: 2020 We present new excess risk bounds for general unbounded loss functions including log loss and squared loss, where the distribution of the losses may be heavy-tailed. The bounds hold for general estimators, but they are optimized when applied to $eta$-generalized Bayesian, MDL, and empirical risk minimization estimators. In the case of log loss, the bounds imply convergence rates for generalized Bayesian inference under misspecification in terms of a generalization of the Hellinger metric as long as the learning rate $eta$ is set correctly. For general loss functions, our bounds rely on two separate conditions: the $v$-GRIP (generalized reversed information projection) conditions, which control the lower tail of the excess loss; and the newly introduced witness condition, which controls the upper tail. The parameter $v$ in the $v$-GRIP conditions determines the achievable rate and is akin to the exponent in the Tsybakov margin condition and the Bernstein condition for bounded losses, which the $v$-GRIP conditions generalize; favorable $v$ in combination with small model complexity leads to $ ilde{O}(1/n)$ rates. The witness condition allows us to connect the excess risk to an 'annealed' version thereof, by which we generalize several previous results connecting Hellinger and Rényi divergence to KL divergence. Full Article
fun Robust Asynchronous Stochastic Gradient-Push: Asymptotically Optimal and Network-Independent Performance for Strongly Convex Functions By Published On :: 2020 We consider the standard model of distributed optimization of a sum of functions $F(mathbf z) = sum_{i=1}^n f_i(mathbf z)$, where node $i$ in a network holds the function $f_i(mathbf z)$. We allow for a harsh network model characterized by asynchronous updates, message delays, unpredictable message losses, and directed communication among nodes. In this setting, we analyze a modification of the Gradient-Push method for distributed optimization, assuming that (i) node $i$ is capable of generating gradients of its function $f_i(mathbf z)$ corrupted by zero-mean bounded-support additive noise at each step, (ii) $F(mathbf z)$ is strongly convex, and (iii) each $f_i(mathbf z)$ has Lipschitz gradients. We show that our proposed method asymptotically performs as well as the best bounds on centralized gradient descent that takes steps in the direction of the sum of the noisy gradients of all the functions $f_1(mathbf z), ldots, f_n(mathbf z)$ at each step. Full Article
fun The weight function in the subtree kernel is decisive By Published On :: 2020 Tree data are ubiquitous because they model a large variety of situations, e.g., the architecture of plants, the secondary structure of RNA, or the hierarchy of XML files. Nevertheless, the analysis of these non-Euclidean data is difficult per se. In this paper, we focus on the subtree kernel that is a convolution kernel for tree data introduced by Vishwanathan and Smola in the early 2000's. More precisely, we investigate the influence of the weight function from a theoretical perspective and in real data applications. We establish on a 2-classes stochastic model that the performance of the subtree kernel is improved when the weight of leaves vanishes, which motivates the definition of a new weight function, learned from the data and not fixed by the user as usually done. To this end, we define a unified framework for computing the subtree kernel from ordered or unordered trees, that is particularly suitable for tuning parameters. We show through eight real data classification problems the great efficiency of our approach, in particular for small data sets, which also states the high importance of the weight function. Finally, a visualization tool of the significant features is derived. Full Article
fun Youth & Community Initiatives Funding available By www.eastgwillimbury.ca Published On :: Thu, 20 Feb 2020 18:27:25 GMT Full Article
fun Recent developments in complex and spatially correlated functional data By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 04:00 EDT Israel Martínez-Hernández, Marc G. Genton. Source: Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics, Volume 34, Number 2, 204--229.Abstract: As high-dimensional and high-frequency data are being collected on a large scale, the development of new statistical models is being pushed forward. Functional data analysis provides the required statistical methods to deal with large-scale and complex data by assuming that data are continuous functions, for example, realizations of a continuous process (curves) or continuous random field (surfaces), and that each curve or surface is considered as a single observation. Here, we provide an overview of functional data analysis when data are complex and spatially correlated. We provide definitions and estimators of the first and second moments of the corresponding functional random variable. We present two main approaches: The first assumes that data are realizations of a functional random field, that is, each observation is a curve with a spatial component. We call them spatial functional data . The second approach assumes that data are continuous deterministic fields observed over time. In this case, one observation is a surface or manifold, and we call them surface time series . For these two approaches, we describe software available for the statistical analysis. We also present a data illustration, using a high-resolution wind speed simulated dataset, as an example of the two approaches. The functional data approach offers a new paradigm of data analysis, where the continuous processes or random fields are considered as a single entity. We consider this approach to be very valuable in the context of big data. Full Article
fun On estimating the location parameter of the selected exponential population under the LINEX loss function By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 03 Feb 2020 04:00 EST Mohd Arshad, Omer Abdalghani. Source: Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics, Volume 34, Number 1, 167--182.Abstract: Suppose that $pi_{1},pi_{2},ldots ,pi_{k}$ be $k(geq2)$ independent exponential populations having unknown location parameters $mu_{1},mu_{2},ldots,mu_{k}$ and known scale parameters $sigma_{1},ldots,sigma_{k}$. Let $mu_{[k]}=max {mu_{1},ldots,mu_{k}}$. For selecting the population associated with $mu_{[k]}$, a class of selection rules (proposed by Arshad and Misra [ Statistical Papers 57 (2016) 605–621]) is considered. We consider the problem of estimating the location parameter $mu_{S}$ of the selected population under the criterion of the LINEX loss function. We consider three natural estimators $delta_{N,1},delta_{N,2}$ and $delta_{N,3}$ of $mu_{S}$, based on the maximum likelihood estimators, uniformly minimum variance unbiased estimator (UMVUE) and minimum risk equivariant estimator (MREE) of $mu_{i}$’s, respectively. The uniformly minimum risk unbiased estimator (UMRUE) and the generalized Bayes estimator of $mu_{S}$ are derived. Under the LINEX loss function, a general result for improving a location-equivariant estimator of $mu_{S}$ is derived. Using this result, estimator better than the natural estimator $delta_{N,1}$ is obtained. We also shown that the estimator $delta_{N,1}$ is dominated by the natural estimator $delta_{N,3}$. Finally, we perform a simulation study to evaluate and compare risk functions among various competing estimators of $mu_{S}$. Full Article
fun Nonparametric discrimination of areal functional data By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 03 Feb 2020 04:00 EST Ahmad Younso. Source: Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics, Volume 34, Number 1, 112--126.Abstract: We consider a new nonparametric rule of classification, inspired from the classical moving window rule, that allows for the classification of spatially dependent functional data containing some completely missing curves. We investigate the consistency of this classifier under mild conditions. The practical use of the classifier will be illustrated through simulation studies. Full Article
fun Bayesian inference on power Lindley distribution based on different loss functions By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 26 Aug 2019 04:00 EDT Abbas Pak, M. E. Ghitany, Mohammad Reza Mahmoudi. Source: Brazilian Journal of Probability and Statistics, Volume 33, Number 4, 894--914.Abstract: This paper focuses on Bayesian estimation of the parameters and reliability function of the power Lindley distribution by using various symmetric and asymmetric loss functions. Assuming suitable priors on the parameters, Bayes estimates are derived by using squared error, linear exponential (linex) and general entropy loss functions. Since, under these loss functions, Bayes estimates of the parameters do not have closed forms we use lindley’s approximation technique to calculate the Bayes estimates. Moreover, we obtain the Bayes estimates of the parameters using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) method. Simulation studies are conducted in order to evaluate the performances of the proposed estimators under the considered loss functions. Finally, analysis of a real data set is presented for illustrative purposes. Full Article
fun Flexible, boundary adapted, nonparametric methods for the estimation of univariate piecewise-smooth functions By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Tue, 04 Feb 2020 04:00 EST Umberto Amato, Anestis Antoniadis, Italia De Feis. Source: Statistics Surveys, Volume 14, 32--70.Abstract: We present and compare some nonparametric estimation methods (wavelet and/or spline-based) designed to recover a one-dimensional piecewise-smooth regression function in both a fixed equidistant or not equidistant design regression model and a random design model. Wavelet methods are known to be very competitive in terms of denoising and compression, due to the simultaneous localization property of a function in time and frequency. However, boundary assumptions, such as periodicity or symmetry, generate bias and artificial wiggles which degrade overall accuracy. Simple methods have been proposed in the literature for reducing the bias at the boundaries. We introduce new ones based on adaptive combinations of two estimators. The underlying idea is to combine a highly accurate method for non-regular functions, e.g., wavelets, with one well behaved at boundaries, e.g., Splines or Local Polynomial. We provide some asymptotic optimal results supporting our approach. All the methods can handle data with a random design. We also sketch some generalization to the multidimensional setting. To study the performance of the proposed approaches we have conducted an extensive set of simulations on synthetic data. An interesting regression analysis of two real data applications using these procedures unambiguously demonstrates their effectiveness. Full Article
fun Scalar-on-function regression for predicting distal outcomes from intensively gathered longitudinal data: Interpretability for applied scientists By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2019 22:03 EST John J. Dziak, Donna L. Coffman, Matthew Reimherr, Justin Petrovich, Runze Li, Saul Shiffman, Mariya P. Shiyko. Source: Statistics Surveys, Volume 13, 150--180.Abstract: Researchers are sometimes interested in predicting a distal or external outcome (such as smoking cessation at follow-up) from the trajectory of an intensively recorded longitudinal variable (such as urge to smoke). This can be done in a semiparametric way via scalar-on-function regression. However, the resulting fitted coefficient regression function requires special care for correct interpretation, as it represents the joint relationship of time points to the outcome, rather than a marginal or cross-sectional relationship. We provide practical guidelines, based on experience with scientific applications, for helping practitioners interpret their results and illustrate these ideas using data from a smoking cessation study. Full Article
fun Fundamentals of cone regression By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Thu, 19 May 2016 09:04 EDT Mariella Dimiccoli. Source: Statistics Surveys, Volume 10, 53--99.Abstract: Cone regression is a particular case of quadratic programming that minimizes a weighted sum of squared residuals under a set of linear inequality constraints. Several important statistical problems such as isotonic, concave regression or ANOVA under partial orderings, just to name a few, can be considered as particular instances of the cone regression problem. Given its relevance in Statistics, this paper aims to address the fundamentals of cone regression from a theoretical and practical point of view. Several formulations of the cone regression problem are considered and, focusing on the particular case of concave regression as an example, several algorithms are analyzed and compared both qualitatively and quantitatively through numerical simulations. Several improvements to enhance numerical stability and bound the computational cost are proposed. For each analyzed algorithm, the pseudo-code and its corresponding code in Matlab are provided. The results from this study demonstrate that the choice of the optimization approach strongly impacts the numerical performances. It is also shown that methods are not currently available to solve efficiently cone regression problems with large dimension (more than many thousands of points). We suggest further research to fill this gap by exploiting and adapting classical multi-scale strategy to compute an approximate solution. Full Article
fun $M$-functionals of multivariate scatter By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Fri, 20 Mar 2015 09:11 EDT Lutz Dümbgen, Markus Pauly, Thomas Schweizer. Source: Statistics Surveys, Volume 9, 32--105.Abstract: This survey provides a self-contained account of $M$-estimation of multivariate scatter. In particular, we present new proofs for existence of the underlying $M$-functionals and discuss their weak continuity and differentiability. This is done in a rather general framework with matrix-valued random variables. By doing so we reveal a connection between Tyler’s (1987a) $M$-functional of scatter and the estimation of proportional covariance matrices. Moreover, this general framework allows us to treat a new class of scatter estimators, based on symmetrizations of arbitrary order. Finally these results are applied to $M$-estimation of multivariate location and scatter via multivariate $t$-distributions. Full Article
fun Analyzing complex functional brain networks: Fusing statistics and network science to understand the brain By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 28 Oct 2013 09:06 EDT Sean L. Simpson, F. DuBois Bowman, Paul J. LaurientiSource: Statist. Surv., Volume 7, 1--36.Abstract: Complex functional brain network analyses have exploded over the last decade, gaining traction due to their profound clinical implications. The application of network science (an interdisciplinary offshoot of graph theory) has facilitated these analyses and enabled examining the brain as an integrated system that produces complex behaviors. While the field of statistics has been integral in advancing activation analyses and some connectivity analyses in functional neuroimaging research, it has yet to play a commensurate role in complex network analyses. Fusing novel statistical methods with network-based functional neuroimage analysis will engender powerful analytical tools that will aid in our understanding of normal brain function as well as alterations due to various brain disorders. Here we survey widely used statistical and network science tools for analyzing fMRI network data and discuss the challenges faced in filling some of the remaining methodological gaps. When applied and interpreted correctly, the fusion of network scientific and statistical methods has a chance to revolutionize the understanding of brain function. Full Article
fun Curse of dimensionality and related issues in nonparametric functional regression By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Thu, 14 Apr 2011 08:17 EDT Gery GeenensSource: Statist. Surv., Volume 5, 30--43.Abstract: Recently, some nonparametric regression ideas have been extended to the case of functional regression. Within that framework, the main concern arises from the infinite dimensional nature of the explanatory objects. Specifically, in the classical multivariate regression context, it is well-known that any nonparametric method is affected by the so-called “curse of dimensionality”, caused by the sparsity of data in high-dimensional spaces, resulting in a decrease in fastest achievable rates of convergence of regression function estimators toward their target curve as the dimension of the regressor vector increases. Therefore, it is not surprising to find dramatically bad theoretical properties for the nonparametric functional regression estimators, leading many authors to condemn the methodology. Nevertheless, a closer look at the meaning of the functional data under study and on the conclusions that the statistician would like to draw from it allows to consider the problem from another point-of-view, and to justify the use of slightly modified estimators. In most cases, it can be entirely legitimate to measure the proximity between two elements of the infinite dimensional functional space via a semi-metric, which could prevent those estimators suffering from what we will call the “curse of infinite dimensionality”. References:[1] Ait-Saïdi, A., Ferraty, F., Kassa, K. and Vieu, P. (2008). Cross-validated estimations in the single-functional index model, Statistics, 42, 475–494.[2] Aneiros-Perez, G. and Vieu, P. (2008). Nonparametric time series prediction: A semi-functional partial linear modeling, J. Multivariate Anal., 99, 834–857.[3] Baillo, A. and Grané, A. (2009). Local linear regression for functional predictor and scalar response, J. Multivariate Anal., 100, 102–111.[4] Burba, F., Ferraty, F. and Vieu, P. (2009). k-Nearest Neighbour method in functional nonparametric regression, J. Nonparam. Stat., 21, 453–469.[5] Cardot, H., Ferraty, F. and Sarda, P. (1999). Functional linear model, Stat. Probabil. Lett., 45, 11–22.[6] Crambes, C., Kneip, A. and Sarda, P. (2009). Smoothing splines estimators for functional linear regression, Ann. Statist., 37, 35–72.[7] Delsol, L. (2009). Advances on asymptotic normality in nonparametric functional time series analysis, Statistics, 43, 13–33.[8] Fan, J. and Gijbels, I. (1996). Local Polynomial Modelling and Its Applications, Chapman and Hall, London.[9] Fan, J. and Zhang, J.-T. (2000). Two-step estimation of functional linear models with application to longitudinal data, J. Roy. Stat. Soc. B, 62, 303–322.[10] Ferraty, F. and Vieu, P. (2006). Nonparametric Functional Data Analysis, Springer-Verlag, New York.[11] Ferraty, F., Laksaci, A. and Vieu, P. (2006). Estimating Some Characteristics of the Conditional Distribution in Nonparametric Functional Models, Statist. Inf. Stoch. Proc., 9, 47–76.[12] Ferraty, F., Mas, A. and Vieu, P. (2007). Nonparametric regression on functional data: inference and practical aspects, Aust. NZ. J. Stat., 49, 267–286.[13] Ferraty, F., Van Keilegom, I. and Vieu, P. (2010). On the validity of the bootstrap in nonparametric functional regression, Scand. J. Stat., 37, 286–306.[14] Ferraty, F., Laksaci, A., Tadj, A. and Vieu, P. (2010). Rate of uniform consistency for nonparametric estimates with functional variables, J. Stat. Plan. Inf., 140, 335–352.[15] Ferraty, F. and Romain, Y. (2011). 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Stat., 20, 413–430.[23] Rachdi, M. and Vieu, P. (2007). Nonparametric regression for functional data: automatic smoothing parameter selection, J. Stat. Plan. Inf., 137, 2784–2801.[24] Ramsay, J. and Silverman, B.W. (1997). Functional Data Analysis, Springer-Verlag, New York.[25] Ramsay, J. and Silverman, B.W. (2002). Applied functional data analysis; methods and case study, Springer-Verlag, New York.[26] Ramsay, J. and Silverman, B.W. (2005). Functional Data Analysis, 2nd Edition, Springer-Verlag, New York.[27] Stone, C.J. (1982). Optimal global rates of convergence for nonparametric regression, Ann. Stat., 10, 1040–1053.[28] Watson, G.S. (1964). Smooth regression analysis, Sankhya A, 26, 359–372.[29] Yeung, D.T., Chang, H., Xiong, Y., George, S., Kashi, R., Matsumoto, T. and Rigoll, G. (2004). SVC2004: First International Signature Verification Competition, Proceedings of the International Conference on Biometric Authentication (ICBA), Hong Kong, July 2004. Full Article
fun Fast multivariate empirical cumulative distribution function with connection to kernel density estimation. (arXiv:2005.03246v1 [cs.DS]) By arxiv.org Published On :: This paper revisits the problem of computing empirical cumulative distribution functions (ECDF) efficiently on large, multivariate datasets. Computing an ECDF at one evaluation point requires $mathcal{O}(N)$ operations on a dataset composed of $N$ data points. Therefore, a direct evaluation of ECDFs at $N$ evaluation points requires a quadratic $mathcal{O}(N^2)$ operations, which is prohibitive for large-scale problems. Two fast and exact methods are proposed and compared. The first one is based on fast summation in lexicographical order, with a $mathcal{O}(N{log}N)$ complexity and requires the evaluation points to lie on a regular grid. The second one is based on the divide-and-conquer principle, with a $mathcal{O}(Nlog(N)^{(d-1){vee}1})$ complexity and requires the evaluation points to coincide with the input points. The two fast algorithms are described and detailed in the general $d$-dimensional case, and numerical experiments validate their speed and accuracy. Secondly, the paper establishes a direct connection between cumulative distribution functions and kernel density estimation (KDE) for a large class of kernels. This connection paves the way for fast exact algorithms for multivariate kernel density estimation and kernel regression. Numerical tests with the Laplacian kernel validate the speed and accuracy of the proposed algorithms. A broad range of large-scale multivariate density estimation, cumulative distribution estimation, survival function estimation and regression problems can benefit from the proposed numerical methods. Full Article
fun Classification of pediatric pneumonia using chest X-rays by functional regression. (arXiv:2005.03243v1 [stat.AP]) By arxiv.org Published On :: An accurate and prompt diagnosis of pediatric pneumonia is imperative for successful treatment intervention. One approach to diagnose pneumonia cases is using radiographic data. In this article, we propose a novel parsimonious scalar-on-image classification model adopting the ideas of functional data analysis. Our main idea is to treat images as functional measurements and exploit underlying covariance structures to select basis functions; these bases are then used in approximating both image profiles and corresponding regression coefficient. We re-express the regression model into a standard generalized linear model where the functional principal component scores are treated as covariates. We apply the method to (1) classify pneumonia against healthy and viral against bacterial pneumonia patients, and (2) test the null effect about the association between images and responses. Extensive simulation studies show excellent numerical performance in terms of classification, hypothesis testing, and efficient computation. Full Article
fun Collective Loss Function for Positive and Unlabeled Learning. (arXiv:2005.03228v1 [cs.LG]) By arxiv.org Published On :: People learn to discriminate between classes without explicit exposure to negative examples. On the contrary, traditional machine learning algorithms often rely on negative examples, otherwise the model would be prone to collapse and always-true predictions. Therefore, it is crucial to design the learning objective which leads the model to converge and to perform predictions unbiasedly without explicit negative signals. In this paper, we propose a Collectively loss function to learn from only Positive and Unlabeled data (cPU). We theoretically elicit the loss function from the setting of PU learning. We perform intensive experiments on the benchmark and real-world datasets. The results show that cPU consistently outperforms the current state-of-the-art PU learning methods. Full Article
fun Object-Oriented Software for Functional Data By www.jstatsoft.org Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 00:00:00 +0000 This paper introduces the funData R package as an object-oriented implementation of functional data. It implements a unified framework for dense univariate and multivariate functional data on one- and higher dimensional domains as well as for irregular functional data. The aim of this package is to provide a user-friendly, self-contained core toolbox for functional data, including important functionalities for creating, accessing and modifying functional data objects, that can serve as a basis for other packages. The package further contains a full simulation toolbox, which is a useful feature when implementing and testing new methodological developments. Based on the theory of object-oriented data analysis, it is shown why it is natural to implement functional data in an object-oriented manner. The classes and methods provided by funData are illustrated in many examples using two freely available datasets. The MFPCA package, which implements multivariate functional principal component analysis, is presented as an example for an advanced methodological package that uses the funData package as a basis, including a case study with real data. Both packages are publicly available on GitHub and the Comprehensive R Archive Network. Full Article
fun Psychoactive medicinal plants and fungal neurotoxins By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Author: Singh Saroya, Amritpal, authorCallnumber: OnlineISBN: 9789811523137 (electronic bk.) Full Article
fun Milk and dairy foods : their functionality in human health and disease By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Callnumber: OnlineISBN: 9780128156049 (electronic bk.) Full Article
fun Microbial endophytes : functional biology and applications By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Callnumber: OnlineISBN: 9780128196540 (print) Full Article
fun Grand challenges in fungal biotechnology By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Callnumber: OnlineISBN: 9783030295417 (electronic bk.) Full Article
fun Functional foods in cancer prevention and therapy By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Callnumber: OnlineISBN: 9780128165386 (electronic bk.) Full Article
fun Functional and preservative properties of phytochemicals By dal.novanet.ca Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 19:44:43 -0300 Callnumber: OnlineISBN: 9780128196861 (electronic bk.) Full Article
fun Efficient estimation of linear functionals of principal components By projecteuclid.org Published On :: Mon, 17 Feb 2020 04:02 EST Vladimir Koltchinskii, Matthias Löffler, Richard Nickl. Source: The Annals of Statistics, Volume 48, Number 1, 464--490.Abstract: We study principal component analysis (PCA) for mean zero i.i.d. Gaussian observations $X_{1},dots,X_{n}$ in a separable Hilbert space $mathbb{H}$ with unknown covariance operator $Sigma $. The complexity of the problem is characterized by its effective rank $mathbf{r}(Sigma):=frac{operatorname{tr}(Sigma)}{|Sigma |}$, where $mathrm{tr}(Sigma)$ denotes the trace of $Sigma $ and $|Sigma|$ denotes its operator norm. We develop a method of bias reduction in the problem of estimation of linear functionals of eigenvectors of $Sigma $. Under the assumption that $mathbf{r}(Sigma)=o(n)$, we establish the asymptotic normality and asymptotic properties of the risk of the resulting estimators and prove matching minimax lower bounds, showing their semiparametric optimality. Full Article