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Teste de Causalidade de Granger Não Linear de Hiemstra-Jones×Teste de Causalidade de Granger×Entropia de Transferência×
ÁreaEconometriaEconometriaInferência causal
FamíliaHypothesis testRegression modelMachine learning
Ano de origem199419692000
Autor originalCraig Hiemstra & Jonathan JonesClive W. J. GrangerThomas Schreiber
TipoNonparametric hypothesis testTime-series predictive causality testNon-parametric information-theoretic measure
Fonte seminalHiemstra, C., & Jones, J. D. (1994). Testing for linear and nonlinear Granger causality in the stock price-volume relation. The Journal of Finance, 49(5), 1639–1664. DOI ↗Granger, C. W. J. (1969). Investigating Causal Relations by Econometric Models and Cross-spectral Methods. Econometrica, 37(3), 424-438. DOI ↗Schreiber, T. (2000). Measuring information transfer. Physical Review Letters, 85(2), 461–464. DOI ↗
Outros nomesHJ Nonlinear Causality Test, Hiemstra-Jones Test, Nonlinear Granger Causality (Hiemstra-Jones), HJ Nedensellik TestiGranger causality test, Granger non-causality test, predictive causality test, Granger Nedensellik TestiSchreiber Information Transfer, Directed Information Flow, Conditional Mutual Information (directed), Transfer Entropisi
Relacionados353
ResumoThe Hiemstra-Jones test, introduced in 1994, is a nonparametric procedure for detecting nonlinear causal relationships between two time series after removing their linear interdependencies. Developed in the context of stock price and trading volume dynamics, it extends the standard linear Granger causality framework by using correlation integral statistics to detect predictability arising from nonlinear mechanisms that linear VAR models cannot capture.The Granger causality test, introduced by Clive W. J. Granger in 1969, assesses whether the past values of one time series help predict another beyond what the latter's own past already explains. It defines causality in a strictly predictive sense rather than as a structural or physical cause.Transfer Entropy (TE) is a non-parametric, information-theoretic measure of directed statistical dependence between two time series, introduced by Thomas Schreiber in 2000. Grounded in Shannon entropy, it quantifies how much information the past of one process Y reduces uncertainty about the next state of another process X, beyond what X's own past already provides. Unlike linear correlation or Granger causality, TE captures nonlinear interactions and requires no model assumptions about the underlying dynamics.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Hiemstra-Jones Causality · Granger Causality · Transfer Entropy. Recuperado em 2026-06-20 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare