Porovnat metody
Prohlédněte si vybrané metody vedle sebe; řádky, které se liší, jsou zvýrazněny.
| Simulace bootstrap× | Odhad pomocí jackknife metody× | |
|---|---|---|
| Obor≠ | Simulace | Statistika |
| Rodina≠ | Process / pipeline | Hypothesis test |
| Rok vzniku≠ | 1979 | 1956 |
| Tvůrce≠ | Bradley Efron | Maurice Henri Quenouille (bias correction); John W. Tukey (variance estimation and naming) |
| Typ≠ | Simulation-based nonparametric inference | Bias and variance estimation |
| Původní zdroj≠ | Efron, B. & Tibshirani, R.J. (1993). An Introduction to the Bootstrap. Chapman & Hall/CRC. DOI ↗ | Quenouille, M. H. (1956). Notes on Bias in Estimation. Biometrika, 43(3/4), 353–360. DOI ↗ |
| Další názvy≠ | bootstrap resampling, empirical resampling, nonparametric bootstrap, Önyükleme Simülasyonu (Bootstrap Resampling) | delete-one jackknife, leave-one-out jackknife, Jackknife Yeniden Örnekleme |
| Příbuzné≠ | 5 | 3 |
| Shrnutí≠ | Bootstrap simulation, introduced by Bradley Efron in 1979, is a simulation-based inference method that derives the sampling distribution of virtually any statistic by repeatedly resampling with replacement from the observed data. Because it requires no parametric distributional assumptions, it provides a robust, general-purpose alternative to analytical confidence intervals and parametric hypothesis tests across continuous, ordinal, binary, and count data. | Jackknife estimation is a classical resampling technique that computes the bias and variance of a statistical estimator by systematically leaving out one observation at a time and re-computing the statistic on each reduced sample. Introduced by Maurice Quenouille in 1956 for bias correction and extended by John Tukey in 1958 who coined the name, it is the historical predecessor of the bootstrap and remains analytically tractable for smooth, differentiable estimators. |
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