I have a sample of x_i where x_i=epsilon+η , epsilon∼N(0,sigma^2) and η∼N(a,1) i.i.d.

Aryan Lowery

Aryan Lowery

Answered question

2022-10-01

Statistics, confidence interval
I have a sample of x i where x i = ξ + η, ξ N ( 0 , σ 2 ) and η N ( a , 1 ) i.i.d. So I need to construct confidence interval with confidence level γ for σ 2 with unknown a. My attempt is, I used the following statistic: S 2 = ( x i x ¯ ) 2 n 1 but I get an interval which could be with negative endpoints.

Answer & Explanation

Marcel Mccullough

Marcel Mccullough

Beginner2022-10-02Added 11 answers

Step 1
At this point I am inclined to address the problem as follows, and maybe tomorrow I'll know a more explicit argument in favor of this approach.
You have
x i η N ( 0 , σ 2 )  for  i = 1 , , n  and  x 1 , , x n  are conditionally independent given  η ,  and η N ( a , 1 ) .
Therefore
( x i η ) η N ( 0 , σ 2 ) .
This expression “ N ( 0 , σ 2 ) '''' does not depend on η .. Since the conditional distribution of x i η does not depend on η ,, it follows that x i η and η are independent, and that the marginal (or "unconditional", if you like) distribution of x i η is the same as its conditional distribution given η .. And x i η , i = 1 , , n are not only conditionally independent given η ,, but are marginally independent. (Note that x i , i = 1 , , n are not marginally independent.)
Step 2
A well-known result then tells us that
A σ 2 = 1 σ 2 i = 1 n ( x i x ¯ ) 2 χ n 1 2 .
(where A is defined by the equality above). (The reason why A/σ2 has this distribution has been posted here as a question and has been answered. There are several ways to do it.)
So one can find numbers C,D for which the following works:
Pr ( C < χ n 1 2 < D ) = γ . Pr ( C < A σ 2 < D ) = γ . Pr ( A D < σ 2 < A C ) = γ .

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