Contents Online
Statistics and Its Interface
Volume 16 (2023)
Number 1
Special issue on recent developments in complex time series analysis – Part I
Guest editors: Robert T. Krafty (Emory Univ.), Guodong Li (Univ. of Hong Kong), Anatoly Zhigljavsky (Cardiff Univ.)
Generalized Gaussian time series model for increments of EEG data
Pages: 17 – 29
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4310/21-SII692
Authors
Abstract
We propose a new strictly stationary time series model with marginal generalized Gaussian distribution and exponentially decaying autocorrelation function for modeling of increments of electroencephalogram (EEG) data collected from Ugandan children during coma from cerebral malaria. The model inherits its appealing properties from the strictly stationary strong mixing Markovian diffusion with invariant generalized Gaussian distribution (GGD). The GGD parametrization used in this paper comprises some famous light-tailed distributions (e.g., Laplace and Gaussian) and some well known and widely applied heavy-tailed distributions (e.g., Student). Two versions of this model fit to the data from each EEG channel. In the first model, marginal distributions is from the light-tailed GGD sub-family, and the distribution parameters were estimated using quasi-likelihood approach. In the second model, marginal distributions is heavy-tailed (Student), and the tail index was estimated using the approach based on the empirical scaling function. The estimated parameters from models across EEG channels were explored as potential predictors of neurocognitive outcomes of these children 6 months after recovering from illness. Several of these parameters were shown to be important predictors even after controlling for neurocognitive scores immediately following cerebral malaria illness and traditional blood and cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers collected during hospitalization.
Keywords
time series, diffusion process, diffusion discretization, generalized Gaussian distribution, heavy-tailed distribution, tail index
2010 Mathematics Subject Classification
Primary 37M10. Secondary 62G07, 62J20, 62M10, 62P10.
Z. Salinger was supported by the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) Doctoral Training Partnership (project reference 2275322).
Received 19 April 2021
Accepted 11 July 2021
Published 28 December 2022