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  2. Heteroskedasticity-consistent standard errors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heteroskedasticity...

    An alternative to explicitly modelling the heteroskedasticity is using a resampling method such as the wild bootstrap. Given that the studentized bootstrap, which standardizes the resampled statistic by its standard error, yields an asymptotic refinement, [13] heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors remain nevertheless useful.

  3. Homoscedasticity and heteroscedasticity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homoscedasticity_and...

    Heteroscedasticity often occurs when there is a large difference among the sizes of the observations. A classic example of heteroscedasticity is that of income versus expenditure on meals. A wealthy person may eat inexpensive food sometimes and expensive food at other times. A poor person will almost always eat inexpensive food.

  4. White test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_test

    This test, and an estimator for heteroscedasticity-consistent standard errors, were proposed by Halbert White in 1980. [1] These methods have become widely used, making this paper one of the most cited articles in economics.

  5. 8 accounting errors to watch out for and how to fix them - AOL

    www.aol.com/8-accounting-errors-watch-fix...

    No matter how meticulous finance teams are, mistakes happen. In fact, it's estimated that accounting errors and manual financial reporting cost U.S. businesses around $7.8 billion a year. And ...

  6. Newey–West estimator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newey–West_estimator

    In Julia, the CovarianceMatrices.jl package [11] supports several types of heteroskedasticity and autocorrelation consistent covariance matrix estimation including Newey–West, White, and Arellano. In R , the packages sandwich [ 6 ] and plm [ 12 ] include a function for the Newey–West estimator.

  7. Autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autoregressive_conditional...

    In a sample of T residuals under the null hypothesis of no ARCH errors, the test statistic T'R² follows distribution with q degrees of freedom, where ′ is the number of equations in the model which fits the residuals vs the lags (i.e. ′ =).

  8. Homogeneity and heterogeneity (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homogeneity_and...

    There should then be a later stage of analysis to examine whether the errors in the predictions from the regression behave in the same way across the dataset. Thus the question becomes one of the homogeneity of the distribution of the residuals, as the explanatory variables change. See regression analysis.

  9. Ramsey RESET test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramsey_RESET_test

    Consider the model ^ = {} =. The Ramsey test then tests whether (), (), …, has any power in explaining y.This is executed by estimating the following linear regression = + ^ + + ^ +,