ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We consider nonparametric inference of finite dimensional, potentially non-pathwise differentiable target parameters. In a nonparametric model, some examples of such parameters that are always non pathwise differentiable target parameters include probability density functions at a point, or regression functions at a point. In causal inference, under appropriate causal assumptions, mean counterfactual outcomes can be pathwise differentiable or not, depending on the degree at which the positivity assumption holds. In this paper, given a potentially non-pathwise differentiable target parameter, we introduce a family of approximating parameters, that are pathwise differentiable. This family is indexed by a scalar. In kernel regression or density estimation for instance, a natural choice for such a family is obtained by kernel smoothing and is indexed by the smoothing level. For the counterfactual mean outcome, a possible approximating family is obtained through truncation of the propensity score, and the truncation level then plays the role of the index. We propose a method to data-adaptively select the index in the family, so as to optimize mean squared error. We prove an asymptotic normality result, which allows us to derive confidence intervals. Under some conditions, our estimator achieves an optimal mean squared error convergence rate. Confidence intervals are data-adaptive and have almost optimal width. A simulation study demonstrates the practical performance of our estimators for the inference of a causal dose-response curve at a given treatment dose.
We consider high-dimensional measurement errors with high-frequency data. Our focus is on recovering the covariance matrix of the random errors with optimality. In this problem, not all components of the random vector are observed at the same time an
In the setting of high-dimensional linear models with Gaussian noise, we investigate the possibility of confidence statements connected to model selection. Although there exist numerous procedures for adaptive point estimation, the construction of ad
Several novel statistical methods have been developed to estimate large integrated volatility matrices based on high-frequency financial data. To investigate their asymptotic behaviors, they require a sub-Gaussian or finite high-order moment assumpti
We propose a Bayesian approach, called the posterior spectral embedding, for estimating the latent positions in random dot product graphs, and prove its optimality. Unlike the classical spectral-based adjacency/Laplacian spectral embedding, the poste
Bayes classifiers for functional data pose a challenge. This is because probability density functions do not exist for functional data. As a consequence, the classical Bayes classifier using density quotients needs to be modified. We propose to use d