TS Module 3: Trends HW


TS Module 3: Trends HW

Author
Message
peat0801
Forum Newbie
Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Posts: 4, Visits: 1

I understood all of raydhiii's post until:

 = 0 + 2Var(et) due to indepence of the e's.

and then I was lost as to where the 2Var(et) came from exactly. Any help?

Thanks!


RayDHIII
Forum Member
Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Posts: 39, Visits: 138

We are given in the assignment that Var(et) = 1.  (I assume this means for all t, please correct me if I'm wrong.)  This means that Var(et-1) = 1 as well.  Thus:

Var(Yt) = Var(mu + et + et-1) = Var(mu) + Var(et) + Var(et-1).

I simplified (perhaps too quickly) to 2Var(et) because Var(et) = Var(et-1).  Let me know if you have further questions.

RDH


peat0801
Forum Newbie
Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)Forum Newbie (4 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Posts: 4, Visits: 1

Okay, I get it now.  That's what I thought maybe it was but I wasn't sure if it was safe to assume that et-1 was equal to 1 as well.

Thank you!


Delta
Forum Newbie
Forum Newbie (3 reputation)Forum Newbie (3 reputation)Forum Newbie (3 reputation)Forum Newbie (3 reputation)Forum Newbie (3 reputation)Forum Newbie (3 reputation)Forum Newbie (3 reputation)Forum Newbie (3 reputation)Forum Newbie (3 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Posts: 3, Visits: 1
For process 5, Yt = mu + et - et-1

I use equation 3.2.3, I got result of 2/2500
But when I tried to do some simplification like exercise 3.2 on Page 50,
I got Var(~Y)=1/2500Var[(50.u + e50)], which gave me 1/2500 as result.

Im very confused and didnt see where I went wrong.
RayDHIII
Forum Member
Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Posts: 39, Visits: 138

Y-bar = (1/n)*sum(from t=1 to t=n)(Yt).  For our fifth process, this becomes: Y-bar = (1/50)*sum(from t=1 to t=50)(et-et-1).  We remove mu because we know the variance of a constant is zero. 

The summation yields: (e1-e0)+(e2-e1)+(e3-e2)+...+(e49-e48)+(e50-e49).  Note the cancelations within. 

Plugging this summation back in, we find Y-bar = (1/50)(e50-e0).  From here we can easily find the variance: 

Var(Y-bar) = (1/50)2Var(e50-e0).  Recall, the e's are independent and identically distributed, so you should reach your original 2/2500.  Let me know if you have any further questions.

RDH


Luke Grady
Junior Member
Junior Member (13 reputation)Junior Member (13 reputation)Junior Member (13 reputation)Junior Member (13 reputation)Junior Member (13 reputation)Junior Member (13 reputation)Junior Member (13 reputation)Junior Member (13 reputation)Junior Member (13 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Posts: 12, Visits: 1
Where is the square coming from for the gamma over n term?

I just came back to this from not looking at it for a while...seems like there are a lot of different answers for A1 floating around.

I'm getting:

gamma_0 = 2 ;
n = 50 ;
p_0 = 1 ;
p_1 = 1 ;
p_k = 0 for all k > 1


Putting it all together using 3.2.3 I'm getting (2/50)*(1 + 2*(1 - (1/50))) = .1184

Anyone agree or see something I'm doing wrong?


RayDHIII
Forum Member
Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Posts: 39, Visits: 138

Look to appendix A for the rules on variance:  Var(a+bX) = b2Var(X), where "a" and "b" are constants and "X" a random variable.

Also, rhok = gammak/gamma0, I would double-check your rho1 and redo your 3.2.3 to get the correct answer.  Let me know if you have further questions.

RDH


Mark L
Forum Newbie
Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Posts: 2, Visits: 1

I'm still struggling with how to get rho1 ; could some one walk me through how they got it for A2.

I think I understand everything else i'm supposed get out of this chapter, just can't figure out the rho.

 

Thanks


RayDHIII
Forum Member
Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)Forum Member (43 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Posts: 39, Visits: 138

Mark, rhok is the autocorrelation function at lag k, which is given to us to be gammak/gamma0.  Gammak is the autocovariance function at lag k (which should be written gamma0,k, but is simplfied for our convenience), Cov(Yt,Yt-k). 

Thus, rho1 = gamma1/gamma0 = Cov(Yt,Yt-1)/Cov(Yt,Yt-0) = Cov(Yt,Yt-1)/Var(Yt).

For problem 2, we are asked to find Var(Y-bar) of an MA(1) process: Yt = mu + et + .5et-1 with 50 observations (so we can't use the estimate formula, as n should be greater than 50), and Var(et) = 1.  We will use the formula on page 28: Var(Y-bar) = (gamma0/n)[1+2(1-1/n)(rho1)], this is a reduced version of the summation formula above on the same page because an MA(1) process has rhok=0 for k>1.

First, find the variance of Yt using the rules of variance and assume the independence of the e's:  Var(Yt) = Var(mu + et+ .5et-1) = Var(mu) + Var(et) + Var(et-1) = 0 + Var(et) + Var(et) = gamma0.

Next, in order to find rho1, we must find gamma1 = Cov(Yt,Yt-1) = Cov(et+.5et-1,et-1+.5et-2) = Cov(.5et-1,et-1) = .5Var(et-1).  You now have enough information to complete the given formula for Var(Y-bar).  Let me know if you have further questions.

RDH


Mark L
Forum Newbie
Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)Forum Newbie (2 reputation)

Group: Forum Members
Posts: 2, Visits: 1

Thanks raydhiii, I think I have everything pretty much figured out, except for how you got this:

Cov(et+.5et-1,et-1+.5et-2) = Cov(.5et-1,et-1)

is the Cov(et-k,et-l) = 0; whenever k does not equal l?


GO
Merge Selected
Merge into selected topic...



Merge into merge target...



Merge into a specific topic ID...





Reading This Topic


Login
Existing Account
Email Address:


Password:


Social Logins

  • Login with twitter
  • Login with twitter
Select a Forum....











































































































































































































































Neas-Seminars

Search