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May, 1975 Parameter Factorization and Inference Based on Significance, Likelihood, and Objective Posterior
D. A. S. Fraser, Jock MacKay
Ann. Statist. 3(3): 559-572 (May, 1975). DOI: 10.1214/aos/1176343122

Abstract

The concepts of significance, likelihood, and objective posterior have wide ranges of application in statistics. For certain very simple applications--single location variable--there has been recognition that the three concepts produce equivalent numerical results, specifically the equality of observed level of significance, integrated likelihood extreme values, and integrated objective posterior extreme values. The most general model permitting the use of the three concepts for the full parameter, and indeed for component parameters, is a structural model (or probability-space model). This paper examines the three concepts for a structural model and shows for both the full parameter and for component parameters the essential equivalence of observed level of significance, integrated likelihood extreme values, and integrated objective posterior extreme values.

Citation

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D. A. S. Fraser. Jock MacKay. "Parameter Factorization and Inference Based on Significance, Likelihood, and Objective Posterior." Ann. Statist. 3 (3) 559 - 572, May, 1975. https://doi.org/10.1214/aos/1176343122

Information

Published: May, 1975
First available in Project Euclid: 12 April 2007

zbMATH: 0303.62003
MathSciNet: MR378155
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1214/aos/1176343122

Subjects:
Primary: 62A05
Secondary: 62A10 , 62A15 , 62A99

Keywords: comparisons of inference procedures , Inference procedures , objective posterior intervals , significance tests likelihood interval , structural intervals and regions

Rights: Copyright © 1975 Institute of Mathematical Statistics

Vol.3 • No. 3 • May, 1975
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