bcanon {bootstrap}R Documentation

Nonparametric BCa Confidence Limits

Usage

bcanon(x, nboot, theta, ..., 
       alpha=c(0.025, 0.05, 0.1, 0.16, 0.84, 0.9, 0.95, 0.975))

Arguments

x a vector containing the data. To bootstrap more complex data structures (e.g. bivariate data) see the last example below.
nboot number of bootstrap replications
theta function defining the estimator used in constructing the confidence points
... additional arguments for theta
alpha optional argument specifying confidence levels desired

Value

list with the following components
confpoint estimated bca confidence limits
z0 estimated bias correction
acc estimated acceleration constant
u jackknife influence values

References

Efron, B. and Tibshirani, R. (1986). The Bootstrap Method for standard errors, confidence intervals, and other measures of statistical accuracy. Statistical Science, Vol 1., No. 1, pp 1-35.

Efron, B. (1987). Better bootstrap confidence intervals (with discussion). J. Amer. Stat. Assoc. vol 82, pg 171

Efron, B. and Tibshirani, R. (1993) An Introduction to the Bootstrap. Chapman and Hall, New York, London.

Examples

#  bca limits for the  mean 
#  (this is for illustration; 
#   since "mean" is a built in function,
#   bcanon(x,100,mean) would be simpler!)
x <- rnorm(20)                
theta <- function(x){mean(x)}
results <- bcanon(x,100,theta)   
                              
# To obtain bca limits for functions of more 
# complex data structures, write theta
# so that its argument x is the set of observation
# numbers and simply pass as data to bcanon 
# the vector 1,2,..n. 
# For example, find bca limits for
# the correlation coefficient from a set of 15 data pairs:
xdata <- matrix(rnorm(30),ncol=2)
n <- 15
theta <- function(x,xdata){ cor(xdata[x,1],xdata[x,2]) }
results <- bcanon(1:n,100,theta,xdata)

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