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CSSC
2010

Are Bayesian Inferences Weak for Wasserman's Example?

13 years 4 months ago
Are Bayesian Inferences Weak for Wasserman's Example?
: An example was given in the textbook All of Statistics (Wasserman, 2004, pages 186-188) for arguing that, in the problems with a great many parameters Bayesian inferences are weak, because they rely heavily on the likelihood function that captures information of only a tiny fraction of the total parameters. Alternatively he suggested non-Bayesian Horwitz-Thompson estimator, which cannot be obtained from a likelihood-based approaches, including Bayesian approaches. He argued that Horwitz-Thompson estimator is good since it is unbiased and consistent. In this paper, I compared the mean square errors of Horwitz-Thompson estimator with a Bayes estimator at a wide range of parameter configurations. I also simulated these two estimators to visualize them directly. From these comparisons, I conclude that the simple Bayes estimator works better than Horwitz-Thompson estimator for most parameter configurations. Hence Bayesian inferences are not weak for this example.
Longhai Li
Added 09 Dec 2010
Updated 09 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2010
Where CSSC
Authors Longhai Li
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