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Bayesian Robustness Modelling of Location and Scale Parameters
Author(s) -
ANDRADE JOSE AILTON ALENCAR,
O'HAGAN ANTHONY
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
scandinavian journal of statistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.359
H-Index - 65
eISSN - 1467-9469
pISSN - 0303-6898
DOI - 10.1111/j.1467-9469.2011.00750.x
Subject(s) - outlier , mathematics , scale parameter , location parameter , inference , scale (ratio) , robustness (evolution) , bayesian inference , bayesian probability , statistics , posterior probability , statistical inference , probability distribution , econometrics , statistical physics , computer science , artificial intelligence , geography , biochemistry , chemistry , physics , cartography , gene
. The modelling process in Bayesian Statistics constitutes the fundamental stage of the analysis, since depending on the chosen probability laws the inferences may vary considerably. This is particularly true when conflicts arise between two or more sources of information. For instance, inference in the presence of an outlier (which conflicts with the information provided by the other observations) can be highly dependent on the assumed sampling distribution. When heavy‐tailed (e.g. t ) distributions are used, outliers may be rejected whereas this kind of robust inference is not available when we use light‐tailed (e.g. normal) distributions. A long literature has established sufficient conditions on location‐parameter models to resolve conflict in various ways. In this work, we consider a location–scale parameter structure, which is more complex than the single parameter cases because conflicts can arise between three sources of information, namely the likelihood, the prior distribution for the location parameter and the prior for the scale parameter. We establish sufficient conditions on the distributions in a location–scale model to resolve conflicts in different ways as a single observation tends to infinity. In addition, for each case, we explicitly give the limiting posterior distributions as the conflict becomes more extreme.