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Browsing by Author "Emily K. Lada, Committee Member"

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    Skart: A Skewness- and Autoregression-Adjusted Batch-Means Procedure for Simulation Analysis
    (2009-01-30) Tafazzoli Yazdi, Ali; Emily K. Lada, Committee Member; James R. Wilson, Committee Chair; Stephen D. Roberts, Committee Member; David A. Dickey, Committee Member; Yahya Fathi, Committee Member; Natalie M. Steiger, Committee Member
    We discuss Skart, an automated batch-means procedure for constructing a skewness- and autoregression-adjusted confidence interval (CI) for the steady-state mean of a simulation output process in either discrete time (i.e., observation-based statistics) or continuous time (i.e., time-persistent statistics). Skart is a sequential procedure designed to deliver a CI that satisfies user-specified requirements concerning not only the CI’s coverage probability but also the absolute or relative precision provided by its half-length. Skart exploits separate adjustments to the half-length of the classical batch-means CI so as to account for the effects on the distribution of the underlying Student’s t-statistic that arise from skewness (nonnormality) and autocorrelation of the batch means. The skewness adjustment is based on a modified Cornish-Fisher expansion for the classical batch-means Student’s t -ratio, and the autocorrelation adjustment is based on an autoregressive approximation to the batch-means process for sufficiently large batch sizes. Skart also delivers a point estimator for the steady-state mean that is approximately free of initialization bias. The duration of the associated warm-up period (i.e., the statistics clearing time) is based on iteratively applying von Neumann’s randomness test to spaced batch means with progressively increasing batch sizes and interbatch spacer sizes. In an experimental performance evaluation involving a wide range of test processes, Skart compared favorably with other simulation analysis methods—namely, its predecessors ASAP3, WASSP, and SBatch as well as ABATCH, LBATCH, the Heidelberger-Welch procedure, and the Law-Carson procedure. Specifically, Skart exhibited competitive sampling efficiency and substantially closer conformance to the given CI coverage probabilities than the other procedures. Also presented is a nonsequential version of Skart, called N-Skart, in which the user supplies a single simulation-generated series of arbitrary length and specifies a coverage probability for a CI based on that series. In the same set of test processes previously mentioned and for a range of data-set sizes, N-Skart also achieved close conformance to the specified CI coverage probabilities.

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