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Symbolic Calculus in Mathematical Statistics: A Review

Authors :
Di Nardo, Elvira
Source :
S\'eminaire Lotharingien de Combinatoire 67 (2015), Article~B67a
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

In the last ten years, the employment of symbolic methods has substantially extended both the theory and the applications of statistics and probability. This survey reviews the development of a symbolic technique arising from classical umbral calculus, as introduced by Rota and Taylor in $1994.$ The usefulness of this symbolic technique is twofold. The first is to show how new algebraic identities drive in discovering insights among topics apparently very far from each other and related to probability and statistics. One of the main tools is a formal generalization of the convolution of identical probability distributions, which allows us to employ compound Poisson random variables in various topics that are only somewhat interrelated. Having got a different and deeper viewpoint, the second goal is to show how to set up algorithmic processes performing efficiently algebraic calculations. In particular, the challenge of finding these symbolic procedures should lead to a new method, and it poses new problems involving both computational and conceptual issues. Evidence of efficiency in applying this symbolic method will be shown within statistical inference, parameter estimation, L\'evy processes, and, more generally, problems involving multivariate functions. The symbolic representation of Sheffer polynomial sequences allows us to carry out a unifying theory of classical, Boolean and free cumulants. Recent connections within random matrices have extended the applications of the symbolic method.<br />Comment: 72 pages

Subjects

Subjects :
Mathematics - Statistics Theory

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
S\'eminaire Lotharingien de Combinatoire 67 (2015), Article~B67a
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1512.08379
Document Type :
Working Paper