Estimating probability of occurrence of the most likely multinomial event
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1361680
DOI10.1016/S0378-3758(96)00112-7zbMath0900.62123MaRDI QIDQ1361680
Publication date: 15 December 1997
Published in: Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference (Search for Journal in Brave)
Point estimation (62F10) Statistical ranking and selection procedures (62F07) Admissibility in statistical decision theory (62C15)
Related Items (1)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Multi-stage point and interval estimation of the largest mean of k normal populations and the associated second-order properties
- Subset complement addition upper bounds. An improved inclusion-exclusion method
- A complete class theorem for statistical problems with finite sample spaces
- Estimation of multinomial probabilities
- Admissible and minimax estimation for the multinomial distribution and for k independent binomial distributions
- Single-sample Bayes and empirical Bayes rules for ranking and estimating multinomial probabilities
- Further developments in estimation of the largest mean of K normal populations
- Approximate Upper Percentage Points for Extreme Values in Multinomial Sampling
- Some Problems of Simultaneous Minimax Estimation
- The Problem of Estimation
- Probability Inequalities for Multivariate Distributions with Dependence Structures
- An empirical bayes estimate of multinomial probabilities
- Simple Multivariate Inequalities Using Association
- On the Distribution of the Maximum Frequency of a Multinomial Distribution
- Diversity as a Concept and its Measurement
- An inequality involving multinomial probabilities
- Interval Estimation of the Largest Mean of k Normal Populations with Known Variances
- Estimation of the Larger Translation Parameter
- A Property of the Multinomial Distribution
- On Selecting the Most Probable Category
- On the Admissible Estimators for Certain Fixed Sample Binomial Problems
- Simultaneous Estimation of Multinomial Cell Probabilities
- Measurement of Diversity
- Inequalities: theory of majorization and its applications
This page was built for publication: Estimating probability of occurrence of the most likely multinomial event