1.017/1.010 Class 14 Estimation: Estimating Distributional Properties
1.017/1.010 Class 14 Estimation: Estimating Distributional Properties
010 Class 14
Estimation
Estimators
aˆ = aˆ ( x1 , x 2 ,..., x N )
Example:
a = E[x]
N
1
aˆ = aˆ ( x1 , x 2 ,..., x N ) = m x =
N ∑x
i =1
i
1
Since aˆ is derived from a random sample (a set of random variables) it is also a
random variable, defined by the probability distribution Faˆ (aˆ ) . This distribution
describes how much â might deviate from a.
We can sometimes derive Faˆ (aˆ ) or we may use the Central Limit theorem to
justify the assumption that Faˆ (aˆ ) is a normal distribution (if a is derived from a
large random sample).
If Faˆ (aˆ ) is normal, it is completely defined by the mean E[aˆ ] and variance
Var[aˆ ] of aˆ .
Even if Fâ (aˆ ) is not normal we can use the mean and variance of â to
measure the quality of the estimate. “Good” estimates should be
unbiased and consistent:
1.Unbiased
The expected value of the estimate is the true property value:
E[aˆ ] = a
2. Consistent:
The variability of the estimate goes to zero as the sample size
increases:
Var[aˆ ] → 0 as N →∞
If the estimate is unbiased and consistent it will converge to the true value
as the sample size increases.
Reconsider the sample mean mx used to estimate the mean E[x] of Fx(x):
N
1
aˆ = aˆ ( x1 , x 2 ,..., x N ) = m x =
N ∑x
i =1
i
1 N
E[aˆ ] = E[m x ] = E
N
∑
i =1
x i = E[ x ] = a
2
1 N
1
Var[aˆ ] = Var[m x ] = Var
N
∑ x = N Var[ x]
i =1
i
For large samples the Central Limit Theorem implies that mx is normally
distributed. The distribution of mx is centered on E[x] and gradually
converges to E[x] as N increases.
Propose at least two different methods for estimating x90 from the 10
observations.