Skip to main content
Copied images to imgur.com, as they were not being displayed because of new https rule. Added links to original image sources.
Source Link

While Nadarajah (2005) may have used the term 'generalised Normal' to describe a density that nests this form, there are more suitable names that extend far further back in time, and which accordingly seem much more appropriate.

In particular, I believe this should properly be referred to as a Subbotin distribution (Subbotin 1923). Other later references include:

  • Diananda (1949)

  • Turner (1960)

  • Zeckhauser and Thompson (1970)

  • McDonald and Newey (1988)

  • Mineo and Ruggieri (2005)

The functional form given by Subbotin (1923) defines the pdf as:

$$f(x) = \frac{\alpha }{2 b \Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha }\right)}\text{exp}\left[-\left|\frac{x}{b}\right|^{\alpha }\right]$$

Subbotin used parameter $b = 1/h$, but the functional form is otherwise identical to that given here. In this form: $$Var(X) = \frac{b^2 \Gamma \left(\frac{3}{\alpha}\right)}{\Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha}\right)}$$

Here is a plot of the pdf with $b=2$, as parameter $\alpha>1$ varies:

http://www.tri.org.au/se/Subbotinpdfplot.png

(source)

and again for parameter $0<\alpha<1$:

http://www.tri.org.au/se/Subbotinplotsmallalpha.png

(source)

Other names include: Box-Tiao distribution (McDonald and Newey 1988), and Power-Exponential (McDonald and Newey 1988, Johnson et al. 1995). Finally, it is worth noting that some economic papers inappropriately ascribe the name 'Subbotin distribution' to an Exponential-Power distribution that has a different functional form.

References

  • Subbotin, M.T. (1923), On the law of frequency of error, Matematicheskii SbornikMatematicheskii Sbornik, 31, 296-301.

  • Diananda, P. H. (1949), Note on some properties of maximum likelihood estimates, Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical SocietyProceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 45, 536-544.

  • Turner, M. E. (1960), On heuristic estimation methods, BiometricsBiometrics, 16(2), 299-301.

  • Zeckhauser, R. and Thompson, M. (1970), Linear regression with non-normal error terms, The Review of Economics and StatisticsThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 52, 280-286.

  • McDonald, J. B. and Newey, W. K. (1988), Partially adaptive estimation of regression models via the generalized t distribution, Econometric TheoryEconometric Theory, 4, 428-457.

  • Mineo, A. M. and Ruggieri, M. (2005), A software tool for the Exponential Power distribution: the normalp package, Journal of Statistical SoftwareJournal of Statistical Software, 12(4), 1-21.

While Nadarajah (2005) may have used the term 'generalised Normal' to describe a density that nests this form, there are more suitable names that extend far further back in time, and which accordingly seem much more appropriate.

In particular, I believe this should properly be referred to as a Subbotin distribution (Subbotin 1923). Other later references include:

  • Diananda (1949)

  • Turner (1960)

  • Zeckhauser and Thompson (1970)

  • McDonald and Newey (1988)

  • Mineo and Ruggieri (2005)

The functional form given by Subbotin (1923) defines the pdf as:

$$f(x) = \frac{\alpha }{2 b \Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha }\right)}\text{exp}\left[-\left|\frac{x}{b}\right|^{\alpha }\right]$$

Subbotin used parameter $b = 1/h$, but the functional form is otherwise identical to that given here. In this form: $$Var(X) = \frac{b^2 \Gamma \left(\frac{3}{\alpha}\right)}{\Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha}\right)}$$

Here is a plot of the pdf with $b=2$, as parameter $\alpha>1$ varies:

http://www.tri.org.au/se/Subbotinpdfplot.png

and again for parameter $0<\alpha<1$:

http://www.tri.org.au/se/Subbotinplotsmallalpha.png

Other names include: Box-Tiao distribution (McDonald and Newey 1988), and Power-Exponential (McDonald and Newey 1988, Johnson et al. 1995). Finally, it is worth noting that some economic papers inappropriately ascribe the name 'Subbotin distribution' to an Exponential-Power distribution that has a different functional form.

References

  • Subbotin, M.T. (1923), On the law of frequency of error, Matematicheskii Sbornik, 31, 296-301.

  • Diananda, P. H. (1949), Note on some properties of maximum likelihood estimates, Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 45, 536-544.

  • Turner, M. E. (1960), On heuristic estimation methods, Biometrics, 16(2), 299-301.

  • Zeckhauser, R. and Thompson, M. (1970), Linear regression with non-normal error terms, The Review of Economics and Statistics, 52, 280-286.

  • McDonald, J. B. and Newey, W. K. (1988), Partially adaptive estimation of regression models via the generalized t distribution, Econometric Theory, 4, 428-457.

  • Mineo, A. M. and Ruggieri, M. (2005), A software tool for the Exponential Power distribution: the normalp package, Journal of Statistical Software, 12(4), 1-21.

While Nadarajah (2005) may have used the term 'generalised Normal' to describe a density that nests this form, there are more suitable names that extend far further back in time, and which accordingly seem much more appropriate.

In particular, I believe this should properly be referred to as a Subbotin distribution (Subbotin 1923). Other later references include:

  • Diananda (1949)

  • Turner (1960)

  • Zeckhauser and Thompson (1970)

  • McDonald and Newey (1988)

  • Mineo and Ruggieri (2005)

The functional form given by Subbotin (1923) defines the pdf as:

$$f(x) = \frac{\alpha }{2 b \Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha }\right)}\text{exp}\left[-\left|\frac{x}{b}\right|^{\alpha }\right]$$

Subbotin used parameter $b = 1/h$, but the functional form is otherwise identical to that given here. In this form: $$Var(X) = \frac{b^2 \Gamma \left(\frac{3}{\alpha}\right)}{\Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha}\right)}$$

Here is a plot of the pdf with $b=2$, as parameter $\alpha>1$ varies:

(source)

and again for parameter $0<\alpha<1$:

(source)

Other names include: Box-Tiao distribution (McDonald and Newey 1988), and Power-Exponential (McDonald and Newey 1988, Johnson et al. 1995). Finally, it is worth noting that some economic papers inappropriately ascribe the name 'Subbotin distribution' to an Exponential-Power distribution that has a different functional form.

References

  • Subbotin, M.T. (1923), On the law of frequency of error, Matematicheskii Sbornik, 31, 296-301.

  • Diananda, P. H. (1949), Note on some properties of maximum likelihood estimates, Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 45, 536-544.

  • Turner, M. E. (1960), On heuristic estimation methods, Biometrics, 16(2), 299-301.

  • Zeckhauser, R. and Thompson, M. (1970), Linear regression with non-normal error terms, The Review of Economics and Statistics, 52, 280-286.

  • McDonald, J. B. and Newey, W. K. (1988), Partially adaptive estimation of regression models via the generalized t distribution, Econometric Theory, 4, 428-457.

  • Mineo, A. M. and Ruggieri, M. (2005), A software tool for the Exponential Power distribution: the normalp package, Journal of Statistical Software, 12(4), 1-21.

Added second plot for 0 < alpha < 1
Source Link
wolfies
  • 469
  • 3
  • 8

While Nadarajah (2005) may have used the term 'generalised Normal' to describe a density that nests this form, there are more suitable names that extend far further back in time, and which accordingly seem much more appropriate.

In particular, I believe this should properly be referred to as a Subbotin distribution (Subbotin 1923). Other later references include:

  • Diananda (1949)

  • Turner (1960)

  • Zeckhauser and Thompson (1970)

  • McDonald and Newey (1988)

  • Mineo and Ruggieri (2005)

The functional form given by Subbotin (1923) defines the pdf as:

$$f(x) = \frac{\alpha }{2 b \Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha }\right)}\text{exp}\left[-\left|\frac{x}{b}\right|^{\alpha }\right]$$

Subbotin used parameter $b = 1/h$, but the functional form is otherwise identical to that given here. In this form: $$Var(X) = \frac{b^2 \Gamma \left(\frac{3}{\alpha}\right)}{\Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha}\right)}$$

Here is a plot of the pdf with $b=2$, as parameter $\alpha$$\alpha>1$ varies:

http://www.tri.org.au/se/Subbotinpdfplot.png

In this form:and again for parameter $$Var(X) = \frac{b^2 \Gamma \left(\frac{3}{\alpha}\right)}{\Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha}\right)}$$$0<\alpha<1$:

http://www.tri.org.au/se/Subbotinplotsmallalpha.png

Other names include: Box-Tiao distribution (McDonald and Newey 1988), and Power-Exponential (McDonald and Newey 1988, Johnson et al. 1995). Finally, it is worth noting that some economic papers inappropriately ascribe the name 'Subbotin distribution' to an Exponential-Power distribution that has a different functional form.

References

  • Subbotin, M.T. (1923), On the law of frequency of error, Matematicheskii Sbornik, 31, 296-301.

  • Diananda, P. H. (1949), Note on some properties of maximum likelihood estimates, Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 45, 536-544.

  • Turner, M. E. (1960), On heuristic estimation methods, Biometrics, 16(2), 299-301.

  • Zeckhauser, R. and Thompson, M. (1970), Linear regression with non-normal error terms, The Review of Economics and Statistics, 52, 280-286.

  • McDonald, J. B. and Newey, W. K. (1988), Partially adaptive estimation of regression models via the generalized t distribution, Econometric Theory, 4, 428-457.

  • Mineo, A. M. and Ruggieri, M. (2005), A software tool for the Exponential Power distribution: the normalp package, Journal of Statistical Software, 12(4), 1-21.

While Nadarajah (2005) may have used the term 'generalised Normal' to describe a density that nests this form, there are more suitable names that extend far further back in time, and which accordingly seem much more appropriate.

In particular, I believe this should properly be referred to as a Subbotin distribution (Subbotin 1923). Other later references include:

  • Diananda (1949)

  • Turner (1960)

  • Zeckhauser and Thompson (1970)

  • McDonald and Newey (1988)

  • Mineo and Ruggieri (2005)

The functional form given by Subbotin (1923) defines the pdf as:

$$f(x) = \frac{\alpha }{2 b \Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha }\right)}\text{exp}\left[-\left|\frac{x}{b}\right|^{\alpha }\right]$$

Subbotin used parameter $b = 1/h$, but the functional form is otherwise identical to that given here. Here is a plot of the pdf with $b=2$, as parameter $\alpha$ varies:

http://www.tri.org.au/se/Subbotinpdfplot.png

In this form: $$Var(X) = \frac{b^2 \Gamma \left(\frac{3}{\alpha}\right)}{\Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha}\right)}$$

Other names include: Box-Tiao distribution (McDonald and Newey 1988), and Power-Exponential (McDonald and Newey 1988, Johnson et al. 1995). Finally, it is worth noting that some economic papers inappropriately ascribe the name 'Subbotin distribution' to an Exponential-Power distribution that has a different functional form.

References

  • Subbotin, M.T. (1923), On the law of frequency of error, Matematicheskii Sbornik, 31, 296-301.

  • Diananda, P. H. (1949), Note on some properties of maximum likelihood estimates, Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 45, 536-544.

  • Turner, M. E. (1960), On heuristic estimation methods, Biometrics, 16(2), 299-301.

  • Zeckhauser, R. and Thompson, M. (1970), Linear regression with non-normal error terms, The Review of Economics and Statistics, 52, 280-286.

  • McDonald, J. B. and Newey, W. K. (1988), Partially adaptive estimation of regression models via the generalized t distribution, Econometric Theory, 4, 428-457.

  • Mineo, A. M. and Ruggieri, M. (2005), A software tool for the Exponential Power distribution: the normalp package, Journal of Statistical Software, 12(4), 1-21.

While Nadarajah (2005) may have used the term 'generalised Normal' to describe a density that nests this form, there are more suitable names that extend far further back in time, and which accordingly seem much more appropriate.

In particular, I believe this should properly be referred to as a Subbotin distribution (Subbotin 1923). Other later references include:

  • Diananda (1949)

  • Turner (1960)

  • Zeckhauser and Thompson (1970)

  • McDonald and Newey (1988)

  • Mineo and Ruggieri (2005)

The functional form given by Subbotin (1923) defines the pdf as:

$$f(x) = \frac{\alpha }{2 b \Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha }\right)}\text{exp}\left[-\left|\frac{x}{b}\right|^{\alpha }\right]$$

Subbotin used parameter $b = 1/h$, but the functional form is otherwise identical to that given here. In this form: $$Var(X) = \frac{b^2 \Gamma \left(\frac{3}{\alpha}\right)}{\Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha}\right)}$$

Here is a plot of the pdf with $b=2$, as parameter $\alpha>1$ varies:

http://www.tri.org.au/se/Subbotinpdfplot.png

and again for parameter $0<\alpha<1$:

http://www.tri.org.au/se/Subbotinplotsmallalpha.png

Other names include: Box-Tiao distribution (McDonald and Newey 1988), and Power-Exponential (McDonald and Newey 1988, Johnson et al. 1995). Finally, it is worth noting that some economic papers inappropriately ascribe the name 'Subbotin distribution' to an Exponential-Power distribution that has a different functional form.

References

  • Subbotin, M.T. (1923), On the law of frequency of error, Matematicheskii Sbornik, 31, 296-301.

  • Diananda, P. H. (1949), Note on some properties of maximum likelihood estimates, Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 45, 536-544.

  • Turner, M. E. (1960), On heuristic estimation methods, Biometrics, 16(2), 299-301.

  • Zeckhauser, R. and Thompson, M. (1970), Linear regression with non-normal error terms, The Review of Economics and Statistics, 52, 280-286.

  • McDonald, J. B. and Newey, W. K. (1988), Partially adaptive estimation of regression models via the generalized t distribution, Econometric Theory, 4, 428-457.

  • Mineo, A. M. and Ruggieri, M. (2005), A software tool for the Exponential Power distribution: the normalp package, Journal of Statistical Software, 12(4), 1-21.

Add references
Source Link
wolfies
  • 469
  • 3
  • 8

While Nadarajah (2005) may have used the term 'generalised Normal' to describe a density that nests this form, there are more suitable names that extend far further back in time, and which accordingly seem much more appropriate.

In particular, I believe this should properly be referred to as a Subbotin distribution (Subbotin 1923). Other later references include:

  • Diananda (1949)

  • Turner (1960)

  • Zeckhauser and Thompson (1970)

  • McDonald and Newey (1988)

  • Mineo and Ruggieri (2005)

The functional form given by Subbotin (1923) defines the pdf as:

$$f(x) = \frac{\alpha }{2 b \Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha }\right)}\text{exp}\left[-\left|\frac{x}{b}\right|^{\alpha }\right]$$

Subbotin used parameter $b = 1/h$, but the functional form is otherwise identical to that given here. Here is a plot of the pdf with $b=2$, as parameter $\alpha$ varies:

http://www.tri.org.au/se/Subbotinpdfplot.png

In this form: $$Var(X) = \frac{b^2 \Gamma \left(\frac{3}{\alpha}\right)}{\Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha}\right)}$$

Other names include: Box-Tiao distribution (McDonald and Newey 1988), and Power-Exponential (McDonald and Newey 1988, Johnson et al. 1995). Finally, it is worth noting that some economic papers inappropriately ascribe the name 'Subbotin distribution' to an Exponential-Power distribution that has a different functional form.

References

  • Subbotin, M.T. (1923), On the law of frequency of error, Matematicheskii Sbornik, 31, 296-301.

  • Diananda, P. H. (1949), Note on some properties of maximum likelihood estimates, Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 45, 536-544.

  • Turner, M. E. (1960), On heuristic estimation methods, Biometrics, 16(2), 299-301.

  • Zeckhauser, R. and Thompson, M. (1970), Linear regression with non-normal error terms, The Review of Economics and Statistics, 52, 280-286.

  • McDonald, J. B. and Newey, W. K. (1988), Partially adaptive estimation of regression models via the generalized t distribution, Econometric Theory, 4, 428-457.

  • Mineo, A. M. and Ruggieri, M. (2005), A software tool for the Exponential Power distribution: the normalp package, Journal of Statistical Software, 12(4), 1-21.

While Nadarajah (2005) may have used the term 'generalised Normal' to describe a density that nests this form, there are more suitable names that extend far further back in time, and which accordingly seem much more appropriate.

In particular, I believe this should properly referred to as a Subbotin distribution (Subbotin 1923). Other later references include:

  • Diananda (1949)

  • Turner (1960)

  • Zeckhauser and Thompson (1970)

  • McDonald and Newey (1988)

  • Mineo and Ruggieri (2005)

The functional form given by Subbotin (1923) defines the pdf as:

$$f(x) = \frac{\alpha }{2 b \Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha }\right)}\text{exp}\left[-\left|\frac{x}{b}\right|^{\alpha }\right]$$

Subbotin used parameter $b = 1/h$, but the functional form is otherwise identical to that given here. Here is a plot of the pdf with $b=2$, as parameter $\alpha$ varies:

http://www.tri.org.au/se/Subbotinpdfplot.png

In this form: $$Var(X) = \frac{b^2 \Gamma \left(\frac{3}{\alpha}\right)}{\Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha}\right)}$$

Other names include: Box-Tiao distribution (McDonald and Newey 1988), and Power-Exponential (McDonald and Newey 1988, Johnson et al. 1995). Finally, it is worth noting that some economic papers inappropriately ascribe the name 'Subbotin distribution' to an Exponential-Power distribution that has a different functional form.

While Nadarajah (2005) may have used the term 'generalised Normal' to describe a density that nests this form, there are more suitable names that extend far further back in time, and which accordingly seem much more appropriate.

In particular, I believe this should properly be referred to as a Subbotin distribution (Subbotin 1923). Other later references include:

  • Diananda (1949)

  • Turner (1960)

  • Zeckhauser and Thompson (1970)

  • McDonald and Newey (1988)

  • Mineo and Ruggieri (2005)

The functional form given by Subbotin (1923) defines the pdf as:

$$f(x) = \frac{\alpha }{2 b \Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha }\right)}\text{exp}\left[-\left|\frac{x}{b}\right|^{\alpha }\right]$$

Subbotin used parameter $b = 1/h$, but the functional form is otherwise identical to that given here. Here is a plot of the pdf with $b=2$, as parameter $\alpha$ varies:

http://www.tri.org.au/se/Subbotinpdfplot.png

In this form: $$Var(X) = \frac{b^2 \Gamma \left(\frac{3}{\alpha}\right)}{\Gamma \left(\frac{1}{\alpha}\right)}$$

Other names include: Box-Tiao distribution (McDonald and Newey 1988), and Power-Exponential (McDonald and Newey 1988, Johnson et al. 1995). Finally, it is worth noting that some economic papers inappropriately ascribe the name 'Subbotin distribution' to an Exponential-Power distribution that has a different functional form.

References

  • Subbotin, M.T. (1923), On the law of frequency of error, Matematicheskii Sbornik, 31, 296-301.

  • Diananda, P. H. (1949), Note on some properties of maximum likelihood estimates, Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 45, 536-544.

  • Turner, M. E. (1960), On heuristic estimation methods, Biometrics, 16(2), 299-301.

  • Zeckhauser, R. and Thompson, M. (1970), Linear regression with non-normal error terms, The Review of Economics and Statistics, 52, 280-286.

  • McDonald, J. B. and Newey, W. K. (1988), Partially adaptive estimation of regression models via the generalized t distribution, Econometric Theory, 4, 428-457.

  • Mineo, A. M. and Ruggieri, M. (2005), A software tool for the Exponential Power distribution: the normalp package, Journal of Statistical Software, 12(4), 1-21.

Source Link
wolfies
  • 469
  • 3
  • 8
Loading