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  2. 0. Statistics 1B Statistics 1B 1 (1–1) 0. Lecture ...

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/Dept/People/djsteaching/S1B-16-all-lectures-4.pdf
    11 Jan 2016: Examples are spam filters, text and speech recognition, machine learning,bioinformatics, health economics and (some) clinical trials.
  3. Harry Kesten (1931–2019) A personal and scientific tribute Geoffrey…

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~grg/papers/kesten-ams3-small.pdf
    20 Mar 2020: Middle years. Mark Kac visited Holland in 1955, and Harry had theopportunity to meet him at the Mathematical Centre.He wrote to Kac in January 1956 to enquire of agraduate fellowship ... Exciting and beau-tiful problems were formulated and solved, and con
  4. A Conversation with Jon Wellner

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~rjs57/euclid.ss.1543482062.pdf
    29 Nov 2018: the 2008 Annals paper Jager and Wellner (2007)with Leah Jager on goodness of fit tests based onRényi divergences. ... figuring out newnonparametric confidence bands for distributionfunctions related to an intriguing test statistic dueto Berk and Jones.
  5. 8 Mar 2016: 22. 6.3 Optimal stopping over the infinite horizon. 23. 6.4 Example: sequential probability ratio test. ... 6516.2 Problems in which time appears explicitly. 6616.3 Example: monopolist. 6616.4 Example: neoclassical economic growth.
  6. Biometrika (2015), 102, 2, pp. 315–323 doi:…

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~rjs57/Biometrika-2015-Yu-315-23.pdf
    23 Oct 2016: 3). If we are interested in the middle block of eigenvectors correspondingto those with corresponding eigenvalue 3 in , then for every orthogonal matrix Ô Rdd ,. ‖V̂ Ô V ‖F = 21/2‖ ... Fan and X. Han (arXiv: 1305.7007) on estimating the false
  7. 29 Nov 2014: 22. 6.3 Optimal stopping over the infinite horizon. 23. 6.4 Example: sequential probability ratio test. ... 6416.2 Problems in which time appears explicitly. 6516.3 Example: monopolist. 6516.4 Example: neoclassical economic growth.
  8. 22 May 2013: 22. 6.3 Optimal stopping over the infinite horizon. 22. 6.4 Sequential Probability Ratio Test. ... 6615.4 Problems in which time appears explicitly. 6615.5 Example: monopolist. 6715.6 Example: neoclassical economic growth.
  9. Nonparametric Bernstein-von Mises theorems in Gaussian white noise

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~nickl/Site/__files/AOS1133.pdf
    28 Oct 2013: Bayesianinference on f is then entirely based on this posterior distribution—it gives accessto point estimates for f , credible sets and tests in a natural way. ... A frequentistgoodness of fit test of a null hypothesis H0 : f = f0 could, for instance,
  10. 1034 IEEE JOURNAL ON SELECTED AREAS IN COMMUNICATIONS, VOL. ...

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~rrw1/publications/Courcoubetis%20-%20Weber%202006%20%20Incentives%20for%20large%20peer-to-peer%20systems.pdf
    15 Sep 2011: C. Courcoubetis is with the Athens University of Economics and Business,Athens 10434, Greece. ... Thisgreatly reduces the economic value of many new portable de-vices, such as PDAs, tablet computers, and smart-phones run-ning the IP protocol.
  11. Probability About these notes. Many people have written excellent ...

    www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~rrw1/prob/prob-weber.pdf
    16 Sep 2019: Screening test.Simpson’s paradox. 6.1 Conditional probability. Suppose B is an event with P(B) > 0. ... However, the test yields a false positive rate of1% of the healthy persons tested.

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