
Different Classical Methods of Estimation and Chi-squared Goodness-of-fit Test for Unit Generalized Inverse Weibull Distribution
Author(s) -
Khaoula Aidi,
Sanku Dey,
Devendra Kumar,
Nacira Seddik-Ameur
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
österreichische zeitschrift für statistik
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.342
H-Index - 9
ISSN - 1026-597X
DOI - 10.17713/ajs.v50i5.1181
Subject(s) - mathematics , statistics , weibull distribution , test statistic , goodness of fit , mean squared error , parametric statistics , chi square test , statistical hypothesis testing
In this paper, we try to contribute to the distribution theory literature by incorporating a new bounded distribution, called the unit generalized inverse Weibull distribution (UGIWD) in the (0, 1) intervals by transformation method. The proposed distribution exhibits increasing and bathtub shaped hazard rate function. We derive some basic statistical properties of the new distribution. Based on complete sample, the model parameters are obtained by the methods of maximum likelihood, least square, weighted least square, percentile, maximum product of spacing and Cram`er-von-Mises and compared them using Monte Carlo simulation study. In addition, bootstrap confidence intervals of the parameters of the model based on aforementioned methods of estimation are also obtained. We illustrate the performance of the proposed distribution by means of one real data set and the data set shows that the new distribution is more appropriate as compared to unit Birnbaum-Saunders, unit gamma, unit Weibull, Kumaraswamy and unit Burr III distributions. Further, we construct chi-squared goodness-of-fit tests for the UGIWD using right censored data based on Nikulin-Rao-Robson (NRR) statistic and its modification. The criterion test used is the modified chi-squared statistic Y^2, developedby Bagdonavi?ius and Nikulin, 2011 for some parametric models when data are censored. The performances of the proposed test are shown by an intensive simulation study and an application to real data set