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This book provides one of the first accounts of statistical analysis and inference based on approximate models Developed by the author, this approach consistently treats models as approximations to data, not to some underlying truth. The author develops a concept of approximation for probability models with applications to discrete data, location scale, ANOVA, nonparametric regression, image analysis, densities, time series, and model choice. He also offers a critique of statistics that covers likelihood, Bayesian statistics, sufficient statistics, efficiency, asymptotics, and model choice.
List of contents
Introduction. A Concept of Approximation. Discrete Models. Outliers. The Location-Scale Problem. The Analysis of Variance. Nonparametric Regression: Location. Nonparametric Regression: Scale. Image Analysis. Nonparametric Densities. A Critique of Statistics. Bibliography. Index.
About the author
Patrick Laurie Davies
Summary
The First Detailed Account of Statistical Analysis That Treats Models as Approximations
The idea of truth plays a role in both Bayesian and frequentist statistics. The Bayesian concept of coherence is based on the fact that two different models or parameter values cannot both be true. Frequentist statistics is formulated as the problem of estimating the "true but unknown" parameter value that generated the data.
Forgoing any concept of truth, Data Analysis and Approximate Models: Model Choice, Location-Scale, Analysis of Variance, Nonparametric Regression and Image Analysis presents statistical analysis/inference based on approximate models. Developed by the author, this approach consistently treats models as approximations to data, not to some underlying truth.
The author develops a concept of approximation for probability models with applications to:
- Discrete data
- Location scale
- Analysis of variance (ANOVA)
- Nonparametric regression, image analysis, and densities
- Time series
- Model choice
The book first highlights problems with concepts such as likelihood and efficiency and covers the definition of approximation and its consequences. A chapter on discrete data then presents the total variation metric as well as the Kullback–Leibler and chi-squared discrepancies as measures of fit. After focusing on outliers, the book discusses the location-scale problem, including approximation intervals, and gives a new treatment of higher-way ANOVA. The next several chapters describe novel procedures of nonparametric regression based on approximation. The final chapter assesses a range of statistical topics, from the likelihood principle to asymptotics and model choice.
Additional text
"Davies tackles the problem of the foundations of statistics. … reading this book will make you think and question your own views on statistics. It reminds us that the foundations of statistics are still, and more than ever, open to discussion."—Mathematical Reviews, August 2015