Fat-Tailed Distributions

Data, Diagnostics and Dependence

Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Mathematics
Cover of the book Fat-Tailed Distributions by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz, Wiley
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz ISBN: 9781119054122
Publisher: Wiley Publication: November 11, 2014
Imprint: Wiley-ISTE Language: English
Author: Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
ISBN: 9781119054122
Publisher: Wiley
Publication: November 11, 2014
Imprint: Wiley-ISTE
Language: English

This title is written for the numerate nonspecialist, and hopes to serve three purposes. First it gathers mathematical material from diverse but related fields of order statistics, records, extreme value theory, majorization, regular variation and subexponentiality. All of these are relevant for understanding fat tails, but they are not, to our knowledge, brought together in a single source for the target readership. Proofs that give insight are included, but for most fussy calculations the reader is referred to the excellent sources referenced in the text. Multivariate extremes are not treated. This allows us to present material spread over hundreds of pages in specialist texts in twenty pages. Chapter 5 develops new material on heavy tail diagnostics and gives more mathematical detail. Since variances and covariances may not exist for heavy tailed joint distributions, Chapter 6 reviews dependence concepts for certain classes of heavy tailed joint distributions, with a view to regressing heavy tailed variables.

Second, it presents a new measure of obesity. The most popular definitions in terms of regular variation and subexponentiality invoke putative properties that hold at infinity, and this complicates any empirical estimate. Each definition captures some but not all of the intuitions associated with tail heaviness. Chapter 5 studies two candidate indices of tail heaviness based on the tendency of the mean excess plot to collapse as data are aggregated. The probability that the largest value is more than twice the second largest has intuitive appeal but its estimator has very poor accuracy. The Obesity index is defined for a positive random variable X as:

Ob(X) = P (X1 +X4 > X2 +X3|X1 ≤ X2 ≤ X3 ≤ X4), Xi independent copies of X.

For empirical distributions, obesity is defined by bootstrapping. This index reasonably captures intuitions of tail heaviness. Among its properties, if α > 1 then Ob(X) < Ob(Xα). However, it does not completely mimic the tail index of regularly varying distributions, or the extreme value index. A Weibull distribution with shape 1/4 is more obese than a Pareto distribution with tail index 1, even though this Pareto has infinite mean and the Weibull’s moments are all finite. Chapter 5 explores properties of the Obesity index.

Third and most important, we hope to convince the reader that fat tail phenomena pose real problems; they are really out there and they seriously challenge our usual ways of thinking about historical averages, outliers, trends, regression coefficients and confidence bounds among many other things. Data on flood insurance claims, crop loss claims, hospital discharge bills, precipitation and damages and fatalities from natural catastrophes drive this point home. While most fat tailed distributions are ”bad”, research in fat tails is one distribution whose tail will hopefully get fatter.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

This title is written for the numerate nonspecialist, and hopes to serve three purposes. First it gathers mathematical material from diverse but related fields of order statistics, records, extreme value theory, majorization, regular variation and subexponentiality. All of these are relevant for understanding fat tails, but they are not, to our knowledge, brought together in a single source for the target readership. Proofs that give insight are included, but for most fussy calculations the reader is referred to the excellent sources referenced in the text. Multivariate extremes are not treated. This allows us to present material spread over hundreds of pages in specialist texts in twenty pages. Chapter 5 develops new material on heavy tail diagnostics and gives more mathematical detail. Since variances and covariances may not exist for heavy tailed joint distributions, Chapter 6 reviews dependence concepts for certain classes of heavy tailed joint distributions, with a view to regressing heavy tailed variables.

Second, it presents a new measure of obesity. The most popular definitions in terms of regular variation and subexponentiality invoke putative properties that hold at infinity, and this complicates any empirical estimate. Each definition captures some but not all of the intuitions associated with tail heaviness. Chapter 5 studies two candidate indices of tail heaviness based on the tendency of the mean excess plot to collapse as data are aggregated. The probability that the largest value is more than twice the second largest has intuitive appeal but its estimator has very poor accuracy. The Obesity index is defined for a positive random variable X as:

Ob(X) = P (X1 +X4 > X2 +X3|X1 ≤ X2 ≤ X3 ≤ X4), Xi independent copies of X.

For empirical distributions, obesity is defined by bootstrapping. This index reasonably captures intuitions of tail heaviness. Among its properties, if α > 1 then Ob(X) < Ob(Xα). However, it does not completely mimic the tail index of regularly varying distributions, or the extreme value index. A Weibull distribution with shape 1/4 is more obese than a Pareto distribution with tail index 1, even though this Pareto has infinite mean and the Weibull’s moments are all finite. Chapter 5 explores properties of the Obesity index.

Third and most important, we hope to convince the reader that fat tail phenomena pose real problems; they are really out there and they seriously challenge our usual ways of thinking about historical averages, outliers, trends, regression coefficients and confidence bounds among many other things. Data on flood insurance claims, crop loss claims, hospital discharge bills, precipitation and damages and fatalities from natural catastrophes drive this point home. While most fat tailed distributions are ”bad”, research in fat tails is one distribution whose tail will hopefully get fatter.

More books from Wiley

Cover of the book Improving Performance by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
Cover of the book Arbitrary Lagrangian Eulerian and Fluid-Structure Interaction by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
Cover of the book A Decade of Delusions by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
Cover of the book Economist on Wall Street (Peter L. Bernstein's Finance Classics) by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
Cover of the book Einfach richtig Geld verdienen mit Gold, Silber, Platin und mehr by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
Cover of the book Applied Bayesian Modelling by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
Cover of the book Protected Areas by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
Cover of the book Applied Process Control by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
Cover of the book Paediatric Dentistry at a Glance by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
Cover of the book Limits of Detection in Chemical Analysis by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
Cover of the book How-to Manual for Pacemaker and ICD Devices by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
Cover of the book CCNA Data Center: Introducing Cisco Data Center Technologies Study Guide by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
Cover of the book Heidegger by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
Cover of the book Transparency by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
Cover of the book YouthNation by Roger M. Cooke, Daan Nieboer, Jolanta Misiewicz
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy