Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1156768 Stochastic Processes and their Applications 2012 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

Trimming is a standard method to decrease the effect of large sample elements in statistical procedures, used, e.g., for constructing robust estimators and tests. Trimming also provides a profound insight into the partial sum behavior of i.i.d. sequences. There is a wide and nearly complete asymptotic theory of trimming, with one remarkable gap: no satisfactory criteria for the central limit theorem for modulus trimmed sums have been found, except for symmetric random variables. In this paper we investigate this problem in the case when the variables are in the domain of attraction of a stable law. Our results show that for modulus trimmed sums the validity of the central limit theorem depends sensitively on the behavior of the tail ratio P(X>t)/P(|X|>t)P(X>t)/P(|X|>t) of the underlying variable XX as t→∞t→∞ and paradoxically, increasing the number of trimmed elements does not generally improve partial sum behavior.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Mathematics (General)
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