Let X ~ Ber(n1; p), Y ~ Ber(n2; p^2), where X and Y are independent. Find a minimal sufficient statistic T and, using a nontrivial function, show that it is not complete.

Izabelle Lowery

Izabelle Lowery

Answered question

2022-10-29

Let X B e r ( n 1 ; p ) , Y B e r ( n 2 ; p 2 ) , where X and Y are independent. Find a minimal sufficient statistic T and, using a nontrivial function, show that it is not complete.

Answer & Explanation

Ostrakodec3

Ostrakodec3

Beginner2022-10-30Added 18 answers

First write the likelihood function:
f ( x , y | p ) = [ p x ( 1 p ) 1 x ] [ p 2 y ( 1 p 2 ) 1 y ]
From this use the Lehmann-Scheffe Theorem. Need to find T such that
T ( x 1 , y 1 ) = T ( x 2 , y 2 ) f ( x 1 , y 1 | p ) f ( x 2 , y 2 | p ) = c ( x 1 , y 1 , x 2 , y 2 )
To this end, let's compute the likelihood ratio:
f ( x 1 , y 1 | p ) f ( x 2 , y 2 | p ) = p x 1 ( 1 p ) 1 x 1 p 2 y 1 ( 1 p 2 ) 1 y 1 p x 2 ( 1 p ) 1 x 2 p 2 y 2 ( 1 p 2 ) 1 y 2 = p ( x 1 x 2 ) ( 1 p ) x 2 x 1 p 2 ( y 1 y 2 ) ( 1 p 2 ) y 2 y 1
It can be seen then that the ratio does not depend on p if and only if x 1 = x 2 , y 1 = y 2 , x 1 = x 2 , y 1 = y 2 . By the Lehmann-Scheffe, this implies that T ( X , Y ) = ( X , Y ) is the minimal sufficient statistic.

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