Overview
- Authors:
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N. Balakrishnan
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Department of Mathematics and Statistics, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada
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William W. S. Chen
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Internal Revenue Service, USA
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Table of contents (7 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-xiii
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- N. Balakrishnan, William W. S. Chen
Pages 1-4
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- N. Balakrishnan, William W. S. Chen
Pages 5-6
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- N. Balakrishnan, William W. S. Chen
Pages 7-12
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- N. Balakrishnan, William W. S. Chen
Pages 13-15
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- N. Balakrishnan, William W. S. Chen
Pages 17-30
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- N. Balakrishnan, William W. S. Chen
Pages 31-38
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- N. Balakrishnan, William W. S. Chen
Pages 39-40
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About this book
Lognormal distributions are one of the most commonly studied models in the sta tistical literature while being most frequently used in the applied literature. The lognormal distributions have been used in problems arising from such diverse fields as hydrology, biology, communication engineering, environmental science, reliability, agriculture, medical science, mechanical engineering, material science, and pharma cology. Though the lognormal distributions have been around from the beginning of this century (see Chapter 1), much of the work concerning inferential methods for the parameters of lognormal distributions has been done in the recent past. Most of these methods of inference, particUlarly those based on censored samples, involve extensive use of numerical methods to solve some nonlinear equations. Order statistics and their moments have been discussed quite extensively in the literature for many distributions. It is very well known that the moments of order statistics can be derived explicitly only in the case of a few distributions such as exponential, uniform, power function, Pareto, and logistic. In most other cases in cluding the lognormal case, they have to be numerically determined. The moments of order statistics from a specific lognormal distribution have been tabulated ear lier. However, the moments of order statistics from general lognormal distributions have not been discussed in the statistical literature until now primarily due to the extreme computational complexity in their numerical determination.
Authors and Affiliations
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Department of Mathematics and Statistics, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada
N. Balakrishnan
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Internal Revenue Service, USA
William W. S. Chen