Bilinear Stochastic Models and Related Problems of Nonlinear Time Series Analysis [electronic resource] : A Frequency Domain Approach /

"Ninety percent of inspiration is perspiration. " [31] The Wiener approach to nonlinear stochastic systems [146] permits the representation of single-valued systems with memory for which a small per­ turbation of the input produces a small perturbation of the output. The Wiener functional series representation contains many transfer functions to describe entirely the input-output connections. Although, theoretically, these representations are elegant, in practice it is not feasible to estimate all the finite-order transfer functions (or the kernels) from a finite sam­ ple. One of the most important classes of stochastic systems, especially from a statistical point of view, is the case when all the transfer functions are determined by finitely many parameters. Therefore, one has to seek a finite-parameter nonlinear model which can adequately represent non­ linearity in a series. Among the special classes of nonlinear models that have been studied are the bilinear processes, which have found applica­ tions both in econometrics and control theory; see, for example, Granger and Andersen [43] and Ruberti, et al. [4]. These bilinear processes are de­ fined to be linear in both input and output only, when either the input or output are fixed. The bilinear model was introduced by Granger and Andersen [43] and Subba Rao [118], [119]. Terdik [126] gave the solution of xii a lower triangular bilinear model in terms of multiple Wiener-It(') integrals and gave a sufficient condition for the second order stationarity. An impor­ tant.

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Main Authors: Terdik, György. author., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 1999
Subjects:Mathematics., Applied mathematics., Engineering mathematics., Applications of Mathematics.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-1552-3
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record_format koha
institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Mathematics.
Applied mathematics.
Engineering mathematics.
Mathematics.
Applications of Mathematics.
Mathematics.
Applied mathematics.
Engineering mathematics.
Mathematics.
Applications of Mathematics.
spellingShingle Mathematics.
Applied mathematics.
Engineering mathematics.
Mathematics.
Applications of Mathematics.
Mathematics.
Applied mathematics.
Engineering mathematics.
Mathematics.
Applications of Mathematics.
Terdik, György. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Bilinear Stochastic Models and Related Problems of Nonlinear Time Series Analysis [electronic resource] : A Frequency Domain Approach /
description "Ninety percent of inspiration is perspiration. " [31] The Wiener approach to nonlinear stochastic systems [146] permits the representation of single-valued systems with memory for which a small per­ turbation of the input produces a small perturbation of the output. The Wiener functional series representation contains many transfer functions to describe entirely the input-output connections. Although, theoretically, these representations are elegant, in practice it is not feasible to estimate all the finite-order transfer functions (or the kernels) from a finite sam­ ple. One of the most important classes of stochastic systems, especially from a statistical point of view, is the case when all the transfer functions are determined by finitely many parameters. Therefore, one has to seek a finite-parameter nonlinear model which can adequately represent non­ linearity in a series. Among the special classes of nonlinear models that have been studied are the bilinear processes, which have found applica­ tions both in econometrics and control theory; see, for example, Granger and Andersen [43] and Ruberti, et al. [4]. These bilinear processes are de­ fined to be linear in both input and output only, when either the input or output are fixed. The bilinear model was introduced by Granger and Andersen [43] and Subba Rao [118], [119]. Terdik [126] gave the solution of xii a lower triangular bilinear model in terms of multiple Wiener-It(') integrals and gave a sufficient condition for the second order stationarity. An impor­ tant.
format Texto
topic_facet Mathematics.
Applied mathematics.
Engineering mathematics.
Mathematics.
Applications of Mathematics.
author Terdik, György. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Terdik, György. author.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Terdik, György. author.
title Bilinear Stochastic Models and Related Problems of Nonlinear Time Series Analysis [electronic resource] : A Frequency Domain Approach /
title_short Bilinear Stochastic Models and Related Problems of Nonlinear Time Series Analysis [electronic resource] : A Frequency Domain Approach /
title_full Bilinear Stochastic Models and Related Problems of Nonlinear Time Series Analysis [electronic resource] : A Frequency Domain Approach /
title_fullStr Bilinear Stochastic Models and Related Problems of Nonlinear Time Series Analysis [electronic resource] : A Frequency Domain Approach /
title_full_unstemmed Bilinear Stochastic Models and Related Problems of Nonlinear Time Series Analysis [electronic resource] : A Frequency Domain Approach /
title_sort bilinear stochastic models and related problems of nonlinear time series analysis [electronic resource] : a frequency domain approach /
publisher New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer,
publishDate 1999
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-1552-3
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spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:2057632018-07-30T23:35:11ZBilinear Stochastic Models and Related Problems of Nonlinear Time Series Analysis [electronic resource] : A Frequency Domain Approach / Terdik, György. author. SpringerLink (Online service) textNew York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer,1999.eng"Ninety percent of inspiration is perspiration. " [31] The Wiener approach to nonlinear stochastic systems [146] permits the representation of single-valued systems with memory for which a small per­ turbation of the input produces a small perturbation of the output. The Wiener functional series representation contains many transfer functions to describe entirely the input-output connections. Although, theoretically, these representations are elegant, in practice it is not feasible to estimate all the finite-order transfer functions (or the kernels) from a finite sam­ ple. One of the most important classes of stochastic systems, especially from a statistical point of view, is the case when all the transfer functions are determined by finitely many parameters. Therefore, one has to seek a finite-parameter nonlinear model which can adequately represent non­ linearity in a series. Among the special classes of nonlinear models that have been studied are the bilinear processes, which have found applica­ tions both in econometrics and control theory; see, for example, Granger and Andersen [43] and Ruberti, et al. [4]. These bilinear processes are de­ fined to be linear in both input and output only, when either the input or output are fixed. The bilinear model was introduced by Granger and Andersen [43] and Subba Rao [118], [119]. Terdik [126] gave the solution of xii a lower triangular bilinear model in terms of multiple Wiener-It(') integrals and gave a sufficient condition for the second order stationarity. An impor­ tant.1 Foundations -- 1.1 Expectation of Nonlinear Functions of Gaussian Variables -- 1.2 Hermite Polynomials -- 1.3 Cumulants -- 1.4 Diagrams, and Moments and Cumulants for Gaussian Systems -- 1.5 Stationary processes and spectra -- 2 The Multiple Wiener-Itô Integral -- 2.1 Functions of Spaces $$ \overline {L_{\Phi }^{n}} $$ and $$ \widetilde{{L_{\Phi }^{n}}} $$ -- 2.2 The multiple Wiener-Itô Integral of second order -- 2.3 The multiple Wiener-Itô integral of order n -- 2.4 Chaotic representation of stationary processes -- 3 Stationary Bilinear Models -- 3.1 Definition of bilinear models -- 3.2 Identification of a bilinear model with scalar states -- 3.3 Identification of bilinear processes, general case -- 3.4 Identification of multiple-bilinear models -- 3.5 State space realization -- 3.6 Some bilinear models of interest -- 3.7 Identification of GARCH(1,1) Model -- 4 Non-Gaussian Estimation -- 4.1 Estimating a parameter for non-Gaussian data -- 4.2 Consistency and asymptotic variance of the estimate -- 4.3 Asymptotic normality of the estimate -- 4.4 Asymptotic variance in the case of linear processes -- 5 Linearity Test -- 5.1 Quadratic predictor -- 5.2 The test statistics -- 5.3 Comments on computing the test statistics -- 5.4 Simulations and real data -- 6 Some Applications -- 6.1 Testing linearity -- 6.2 Bilinear fitting -- Appendix A Moments -- Appendix B Proofs for the Chapter Stationary Bilinear Models -- Appendix C Proofs for Section 3.6.1 -- Appendix D Cumulants and Fourier Transforms for GARCH(1,1) -- Appendix E Proofs for the Chapter Non-Gaussian Estimation -- E.0.1 Proof for Section 4.4 -- Appendix F Proof for the Chapter Linearity Test -- References."Ninety percent of inspiration is perspiration. " [31] The Wiener approach to nonlinear stochastic systems [146] permits the representation of single-valued systems with memory for which a small per­ turbation of the input produces a small perturbation of the output. The Wiener functional series representation contains many transfer functions to describe entirely the input-output connections. Although, theoretically, these representations are elegant, in practice it is not feasible to estimate all the finite-order transfer functions (or the kernels) from a finite sam­ ple. One of the most important classes of stochastic systems, especially from a statistical point of view, is the case when all the transfer functions are determined by finitely many parameters. Therefore, one has to seek a finite-parameter nonlinear model which can adequately represent non­ linearity in a series. Among the special classes of nonlinear models that have been studied are the bilinear processes, which have found applica­ tions both in econometrics and control theory; see, for example, Granger and Andersen [43] and Ruberti, et al. [4]. These bilinear processes are de­ fined to be linear in both input and output only, when either the input or output are fixed. The bilinear model was introduced by Granger and Andersen [43] and Subba Rao [118], [119]. Terdik [126] gave the solution of xii a lower triangular bilinear model in terms of multiple Wiener-It(') integrals and gave a sufficient condition for the second order stationarity. An impor­ tant.Mathematics.Applied mathematics.Engineering mathematics.Mathematics.Applications of Mathematics.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-1552-3URN:ISBN:9781461215523