How can the score test be consistent?

05/14/2018
by   N. Karavarsamis, et al.
0

The score test statistic using the observed information is easy to compute numerically. Its large sample distribution under the null hypothesis is well known and is equivalent to that of the score test based on the expected information, the likelihood-ratio test and the Wald test. However, several authors have noted that under the alternative this no longer holds and in particular the statistic can take negative values. Here we examine the score test using the observed information in the context of comparing two binomial proportions under imperfect detection, a common problem in ecology when studying occurrence of species. We demonstrate through a combination of simulations and theoretical analysis that a modified rule that rejects the null hypothesis when the observed score statistic is larger than the usual chi-square cut-off or is negative has power that is mostly greater to any other test. In addition consistency is largely restored. Our new test is easy to use and inference is always possible.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
06/13/2020

A power one test for unit roots based on sample autocovariances

We propose a new unit-root test for a stationary null hypothesis H_0 aga...
research
04/03/2023

Two-sample test of sparse stochastic block models

The paper discusses a statistical problem related to testing for differe...
research
11/23/2017

Multiple Improvements of Multiple Imputation Likelihood Ratio Tests

Multiple imputation (MI) inference handles missing data by first properl...
research
11/03/2021

A goodness-of-fit test based on a recursive product of spacings

We introduce a new statistical test based on the observed spacings of or...
research
11/01/2021

Bounds for the chi-square approximation of Friedman's statistic by Stein's method

Friedman's chi-square test is a non-parametric statistical test for r≥2 ...
research
03/18/2021

Bartlett correction of an independence test in a multivariate Poisson model

We consider a system of dependent Poisson variables, where each variable...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset