EXACT P-VALUES FOR DISCRETE MODELS OBTAINED BY ESTIMATION AND MAXIMIZATION

Summary In constructing exact tests from discrete data, one must deal with the possible dependence of the P‐value on nuisance parameter(s) ψ as well as the discreteness of the sample space. A classical but heavy‐handed approach is to maximize over ψ. We prove what has previously been understood info...

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Published in:Australian & New Zealand journal of statistics Vol. 50; no. 4; pp. 329 - 345
Main Author: Lloyd, Chris J.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Melbourne, Australia Blackwell Publishing Asia 01.12.2008
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ISSN:1369-1473
1467-842X
DOI:10.1111/j.1467-842X.2008.00520.x
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Summary:Summary In constructing exact tests from discrete data, one must deal with the possible dependence of the P‐value on nuisance parameter(s) ψ as well as the discreteness of the sample space. A classical but heavy‐handed approach is to maximize over ψ. We prove what has previously been understood informally, namely that maximization produces the unique and smallest possible P‐value subject to the ordering induced by the underlying test statistic and test validity. On the other hand, allowing for the worst case will be more attractive when the P‐value is less dependent on ψ. We investigate the extent to which estimating ψ under the null reduces this dependence. An approach somewhere between full maximization and estimation is partial maximization, with appropriate penalty, as introduced by Berger & Boos (1994, P values maximized over a confidence set for the nuisance parameter. J. Amer. Statist. Assoc. 89, 1012–1016). It is argued that estimation followed by maximization is an attractive, but computationally more demanding, alternative to partial maximization. We illustrate the ideas on a range of low‐dimensional but important examples for which the alternative methods can be investigated completely numerically.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-80JHWXH7-S
istex:07F4A74E52C6CC0A989345CFA323B680C14EA226
ArticleID:ANZS520
c.lloyd@mbs.edu
Melbourne Business School, 200 Leicester Street, Carlton, VIC 3053, Australia. e‐mail
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ISSN:1369-1473
1467-842X
DOI:10.1111/j.1467-842X.2008.00520.x