Posts tagged ‘hierarchical model’

[MADS] Kriging

Kriging is the first thing that one learns from a spatial statistics course. If an astronomer sees its definition and application, almost every astronomer will say, “Oh, I know this! It is like the 2pt correlation function!!” At least this was my first impression when I first met kriging.

There are three distinctive subjects in spatial statistics: geostatistics, lattice data analysis, and spatial point pattern analysis. Because of the resemblance between the spatial distribution of observations in coordinates and the notion of spatially random points, spatial statistics in astronomy has leaned more toward the spatial point pattern analysis than the other subjects. In other fields from immunology to forestry to geology whose data are associated spatial coordinates of underlying geometric structures or whose data were sampled from lattices, observations depend on these spatial structures and scientists enjoy various applications from geostatistics and lattice data analysis. Particularly, kriging is the fundamental notion in geostatistics whose application is found many fields. Continue reading ‘[MADS] Kriging’ »

[ArXiv] 1st week, Feb. 2008

Review papers on Bayesian hierarchical modeling and LAR (least angle regression) appeared in this week’s stat arXiv and in addition to interesting astro-ph papers.

A review paper on LASSO and LAR: [stat.ME:0801.0964] T. Hesterberg et.al.
   Least Angle and L1 Regression: A Review
Model checking for Bayesian hierarchical modeling: [stat.ME:0802.0743] M. J. Bayarri, M. E. Castellanos
   Bayesian Checking of the Second Levels of Hierarchical Models
Continue reading ‘[ArXiv] 1st week, Feb. 2008’ »