Speaker: | 李曾 助理教授 南方科技大学 |
Host: | 朱雪宁, School of Data Science, Fudan University |
Time: | 13:00-14:00, Dec 12, 2019 |
Location: | Zibin N201, Fudan University |
Abstract: | Testing for white noise is a classical yet important problem in statistics, especially for diagnostic checks in time series modeling and linear regression. For high-dimensional time series in the sense that the dimension p is large in relation to the sample size T, the popular omnibus tests including the multivariate Hosking and Li–McLeod tests are extremely conservative, leading to substantial power loss. To develop more relevant tests for high-dimensional cases, we propose a portmanteau-type test statistic which is the sum of squared singular values of the first q lagged sample autocovariance matrices. It, therefore, encapsulates all the serial correlations (up to the time lag q) within and across all component series. Using the tools from random matrix theory and assuming both p and T diverge to infinity, we derive the asymptotic normality of the test statistic under both the null and a specific VMA(1) alternative hypothesis. As the actual implementation of the test requires the knowledge of three characteristic constants of the population cross-sectional covariance matrix and the value of the fourth moment of the standardized innovations, nontrivial estimations are proposed for these parameters and their integration leads to a practically usable test. Extensive simulation confirms the excellent finite-sample performance of the new test with accurate size and satisfactory power for a large range of finite (p,T) combinations, therefore, ensuring wide applicability in practice. In particular, the new tests are consistently superior to the traditional Hosking and Li–McLeod tests. |
Bio: | Dr Li is currently an assistant professor in the Department of Statistics and Data Science, Southern University of Science and Technology. Previously she was a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Statistics at the Pennsylvania State University. Dr. Li obtained her Ph.D. degree from the Department of Statistics and Actuarial Science at the University of Hong Kong. Dr. Li’s research covers random matrix theory and high dimensional statistics. |