An exploratory investigation on the application of the bootstrapping technique to the jackknife estimates of the truncation point of continuous distributions

This thesis presents an application of the bootstrapping technique to jackknife estimates of the truncation point of continuous distributions. All of the estimators used in this study are presented by Ma. Vanessa Santos and Edwin Tajanlangit in their thesis entitled, An Exposition on the Viability o...

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Main Authors: Fajarito, Jovilyn T., Santos, Myleen Sheryl S.
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Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 1992
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/16023
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Institution: De La Salle University
Language: English
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_bachelors-165362022-01-26T04:20:43Z An exploratory investigation on the application of the bootstrapping technique to the jackknife estimates of the truncation point of continuous distributions Fajarito, Jovilyn T. Santos, Myleen Sheryl S. This thesis presents an application of the bootstrapping technique to jackknife estimates of the truncation point of continuous distributions. All of the estimators used in this study are presented by Ma. Vanessa Santos and Edwin Tajanlangit in their thesis entitled, An Exposition on the Viability of the Jackknife Statistics in the Estimation of the Truncation point of Continuous Distributions. These estimators are the jackknife estimator, the first, second, and third order generalized jackknife estimators, symbolized as J(8), G1(8), G2(8), and G3(8), respectively. The estimators established using the jackknife procedure are applied to the truncated exponential distribution using Monte Carlo simulations to estimate the specified truncation point. Computed values of the generalized jackknife are taken randomly to make another estimate of the truncation point. This constituted the bootstrap part of the data simulation. Different sample sizes and replications are used. Results show that the application of bootstrap to the jackknife estimates, the estimators, particularly the maximum likelihood estimator (MLE) produce estimates which are much closer in value to the point of truncation. 1992-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/16023 Bachelor's Theses English Animo Repository Bootstrap theory (Nuclear physics) Distribution (Probability theory) Approximation theory Simulation methods
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
language English
topic Bootstrap theory (Nuclear physics)
Distribution (Probability theory)
Approximation theory
Simulation methods
spellingShingle Bootstrap theory (Nuclear physics)
Distribution (Probability theory)
Approximation theory
Simulation methods
Fajarito, Jovilyn T.
Santos, Myleen Sheryl S.
An exploratory investigation on the application of the bootstrapping technique to the jackknife estimates of the truncation point of continuous distributions
description This thesis presents an application of the bootstrapping technique to jackknife estimates of the truncation point of continuous distributions. All of the estimators used in this study are presented by Ma. Vanessa Santos and Edwin Tajanlangit in their thesis entitled, An Exposition on the Viability of the Jackknife Statistics in the Estimation of the Truncation point of Continuous Distributions. These estimators are the jackknife estimator, the first, second, and third order generalized jackknife estimators, symbolized as J(8), G1(8), G2(8), and G3(8), respectively. The estimators established using the jackknife procedure are applied to the truncated exponential distribution using Monte Carlo simulations to estimate the specified truncation point. Computed values of the generalized jackknife are taken randomly to make another estimate of the truncation point. This constituted the bootstrap part of the data simulation. Different sample sizes and replications are used. Results show that the application of bootstrap to the jackknife estimates, the estimators, particularly the maximum likelihood estimator (MLE) produce estimates which are much closer in value to the point of truncation.
format text
author Fajarito, Jovilyn T.
Santos, Myleen Sheryl S.
author_facet Fajarito, Jovilyn T.
Santos, Myleen Sheryl S.
author_sort Fajarito, Jovilyn T.
title An exploratory investigation on the application of the bootstrapping technique to the jackknife estimates of the truncation point of continuous distributions
title_short An exploratory investigation on the application of the bootstrapping technique to the jackknife estimates of the truncation point of continuous distributions
title_full An exploratory investigation on the application of the bootstrapping technique to the jackknife estimates of the truncation point of continuous distributions
title_fullStr An exploratory investigation on the application of the bootstrapping technique to the jackknife estimates of the truncation point of continuous distributions
title_full_unstemmed An exploratory investigation on the application of the bootstrapping technique to the jackknife estimates of the truncation point of continuous distributions
title_sort exploratory investigation on the application of the bootstrapping technique to the jackknife estimates of the truncation point of continuous distributions
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 1992
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_bachelors/16023
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