One of the late contributions of R.A. Fisher was fiducial intervals and fiducial principled arguments. This approach however is nowhere near as popular as frequentist or Bayesian principled arguments. What is the fiducial argument and why has is not been accepted?
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I am surprised that you don't consider us authorities. Here is a good reference: Encyclopedia of Biostatistics, Volume 2, page 1526; article titled "Fisher, Ronald Aylmer." Starting at the bottom of the first column on the page and going through most of the second column the authors Joan Fisher Box (R. A. Fisher's daughter) and A. W. F. Edwards write
They go on to discuss the debates with Jeffreys and Neyman (particularly Neyman on confidence intervals). The Neyman-Pearson theory of hypothesis testing and confidence intervals came out in the 1930s after Fisher's article. A key sentence followed.
In the same volume of the Encyclopedia of Biostatistics there is an article pp. 1510-1515 titled "Fiducial Probability" by Teddy Seidenfeld which covers the method in detail and compares fiducial intervals to confidence intervals. To quote from the last paragraph of that article,
I think in these last few sentences Edwards is trying to put a favorable light on Fisher even though his theory was discredited. I am sure that you can find a wealth of information on this by going through these encyclopedia papers and similar ones in other statistics papers as well as biographical articles and books on Fisher. Some other referencesBox, J. Fisher (1978). "T. A. Fisher: The Life of a Scientist." Wiley, New York Fisher, R. A. (1930) Inverse Probability. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. 26, 528-535. Bennett, J. H. editor (1990) Statistical Inference and Analysis: Selected Correspondence of R. A. Fisher. Clarendon Press, Oxford. Edwards, A. W. F. (1995). Fiducial inference and the fundamental theorm of natural selection. Biometrics 51,799-809. Savage L. J. (1963) Discussion. Bulletin of the International Statistical Institute 40, 925-927. Seidenfeld, T. (1979). "Philosophical Problems of Statistical Inference" Reidel, Dordrecht . Seidenfeld, T. (1992). R. A. Fisher's fiducial argument and Bayes' theorem. Statistical Science 7, 358-368. Tukey, J. W. (1957). Some examples with fiducial relevance. Annals of Mathematical Statistics 28, 687-695. Zabell, S. L. (1992). R. A. Fisher and the fiducial argument. Statistical Science 7, 369-387. The cocept is difficult to understand because fisher kept changing it as Seidenfeld said in his article in the Encyclopedia of Biostatistics "Following the 1930 publication, during the remaining 32 years of his life, through two books and numerous articles , Fisher steadfastly held to the idea captured in (1), and the reasoning leading to it which we may call'fiducial inverse inference' then there is little wonder that Fisher caused such puzzles with his novel idea" Equation (1) that Seidenfeld refers to is the fiducial distribution of the parameter θ given x as fid(θ|x) α ∂F/∂ θ where F(x,θ) denotes a one-parameter cumulative distribution function for the random variable X at x with parameter θ. At least this was Fisher's initial definition. Later it got extended to multiple parameters and that is where the trouble began with the nuisance parameter σ in the Behrens-Fisher problem. So a fiducial distribution is like a posterior distribution for the parameter θ given the observed data x. But it is constructed without the inclusion of a prior distribution on θ. I went to some trouble getting all this but it is not hard to find. We are really not needed to answer questions like this. A Google search with key words "fiducial inference" would likely show everything I found and a whole lot more. I did a Google search and found that a UNC Professor Jan Hannig has generalized fiducial inference in an attempt to improve it. A Google search yields a number of his recent papers and a powerpoint presentation. I am going to copy and paste the last two slides from his presentation below: Concluding Remarks Generalized fiducial distributions lead often to attractive solution with asymptotically correct frequentist coverage. Many simulation studies show that generalized fiducial solutions have very good small sample properties. Current popularity of generalized inference in some applied circles suggests that if computers were available 70 years ago, fiducial inference might not have been rejected. Quotes Zabell (1992) “Fiducial inference stands as R. A. Fisher’s one great failure.” Efron (1998) “Maybe Fisher’s biggest blunder will become a big hit in the 21st century! " Just to add more references, here is the reference list I have taken from Hannig's 2009 Statistics Sinica paper. Pardon the repetition but I think this will be helpful. Burch, B. D. and Iyer, H. K. (1997). Exact confidence intervals for a variance ratio (or heri- tability) in a mixed linear model. Biometrics 53, 1318-1333. Burdick, R. K., Borror, C. M. and Montgomery, D. C. (2005a). Design and Analysis of Gauge R&R Studies. ASA-SIAM Series on Statistics and Applied Probability. Philadelphia, PA: Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. Burdick, R. K., Park, Y.-J., Montgomery, D. C. and Borror, C. M. (2005b). Confidence intervals for misclassification rates in a gauge R&R study. J. Quality Tech. 37, 294-303. Cai, T. T. (2005). One-sided confidence intervals in discrete distributions. J. Statist. Plann. Inference 131, 63-88. Casella, G. and Berger, R. L. (2002). Statistical Inference. Wadsworth and Brooks/Cole Ad- vanced Books and Software, Pacific Grove, CA, second edn. Daniels, L., Burdick, R. K. and Quiroz, J. (2005). Confidence Intervals in a Gauge R&R Study with Fixed Operators. J. Quality Tech. 37, 179-185. Dawid, A. P. and Stone, M. (1982). The functional-model basis of fiducial inference. Ann. Statist. 10, 1054-1074. With discussions by G. A. Barnard and by D. A. S. Fraser, and a reply by the authors. Dawid, A. P., Stone, M. and Zidek, J. V. (1973). Marginalization paradoxes in Bayesian and structural inference. J. Roy. Statist. Soc. Ser. B 35, 189-233. With discussion by D. J. Bartholomew, A. D. McLaren, D. V. Lindley, Bradley Efron, J. Dickey, G. N. Wilkinson, A. P.Dempster, D. V. Hinkley, M. R. Novick, Seymour Geisser, D. A. S. Fraser and A. Zellner, and a reply by A. P. Dawid, M. Stone, and J. V. Zidek. Dempster, A. P. (1966). New methods for reasoning towards posterior distributions based on sample data. Ann. Math. Statist. 37, 355-374. Dempster, A. P. (1968). A generalization of Bayesian inference. (With discussion). J. Roy. Statist. Soc. B 30, 205-247. Dempster, A. P. (2008). The Dempster-Shafer calculus for statisticians. International Journal of Approximate Reasoning 48, 365-377. E, L., Hannig, J. and Iyer, H. K. (2008). Fiducial intervals for variance components in an unbalanced two-component normal mixed linear model. J. Amer. Statist. Assoc. 103, 854- 865. Efron, B. (1998). R. A. Fisher in the 21st century. Statist. Sci. 13, 95-122. With comments and a rejoinder by the author. Fisher, R. A. (1930). Inverse probability. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society xxvi, 528-535. Fisher, R. A. (1933). The concepts of inverse probability and fiducial probability referring to unknown parameters. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A 139, 343-348. Fisher, R. A. (1935a). The fiducial argument in statistical inference. Ann. Eugenics VI, 91-98. Fisher, R. A. (1935b). The logic of inductive inference. J. Roy. Statist. Soc. B 98, 29-82. Fraser, D. A. S. (1961). On fiducial inference. Ann. Math. Statist. 32, 661-676. Fraser, D. A. S. (1966). Structural probability and a generalization. Biometrika 53, 1–9. Fraser, D. A. S. (1968). The Structure of Inference. John Wiley & Sons, New York-London- Sydney. Fraser, D. A. S. (2006). Fiducial inference. In The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics (Edited by S. Durlauf and L. Blume). Palgrave Macmillan, 2nd edition. ON GENERALIZED FIDUCIAL INFERENCE 543 Ghosh, J. K. (1994). Higher Order Assymptotics. NSF-CBMS Regional Conference Series. Hay- ward: Institute of Mathematical Statistics. Ghosh, J. K. and Ramamoorthi, R. V. (2003). Bayesian Nonparametrics. Springer Series in Statistics. Springer-Verlag, New York. Glagovskiy, Y. S. (2006). Construction of Fiducial Confidence Intervals For the Mixture of Cauchy and Normal Distributions. Master’s thesis, Department of Statistics, Colorado State University. Grundy, P. M. (1956). Fiducial distributions and prior distributions: an example in which the former cannot be associated with the latter. J. Roy. Statist. Soc. Ser. B 18, 217-221. GUM (1995). Guide to the Expression of Uncertainty in Measurement. International Organiza- tion for Standardization (ISO), Geneva, Switzerland. Hamada, M. and Weerahandi, S. (2000). Measurement system assessment via generalized infer- ence. J. Quality Tech. 32, 241-253. Hannig, J. (1996). On conditional distributions as limits of martingales. Mgr. thesis, (in czech), Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic. Hannig, J., E, L., Abdel-Karim, A. and Iyer, H. K. (2006a) Simultaneous fiducial generalized confidence intervals for ratios of means of lognormal distributions. Austral. J. Statist. 35, 261-269. Hannig, J., Iyer, H. K. and Patterson, P. (2006b) Fiducial generalized confidence intervals. J. Amer. Statist. Assoc. 101, 254-269. Hannig, J. and Lee, T. C. M. (2007). Generalized fiducial inference for wavelet regression. Tech. rep., Colorado State University. Iyer, H. K. and Patterson, P. (2002). A recipe for constructing generalized pivotal quantities and generalized confidence intervals. Tech. Rep. 2002/10, Department of Statistics, Colorado State University. Iyer, H. K., Wang, C. M. J. and Mathew, T. (2004). Models and confidence intervals for true values in interlaboratory trials. J. Amer. Statist. Assoc. 99, 1060-1071. Jeffreys, H. (1940). Note on the Behrens-Fisher formula. Ann. Eugenics 10, 48-51. Jeffreys, H. (1961). Theory of Probability. Clarendon Press, Oxford, third edn. Le Cam, L. and Yang, G. L. (2000). Asymptotics in Statistics. Springer Series in Statistics. New York: Springer-Verlag, second edn. Liao, C. T. and Iyer, H. K. (2004). A tolerance interval for the normal distribution with several variance components. Statist. Sinica 14, 217-229. Lindley, D. V. (1958). Fiducial distributions and Bayes’ theorem. J. Roy. Statist. Soc. Ser. B 20, 102-107. McNally, R. J., Iyer, H. K. and Mathew, T. (2003). Tests for individual and population bioe- quivalence based on generalized p-values. Statistics in Medicine 22, 31-53. Mood, A. M., Graybill, F. A. and Boes, D. C. (1974). Introduction to the Theory of Statistics. McGraw-Hill, third edn. Pounds, S. and Morris, S. W. (2003). Estimating the occurrence of false positives and false neg- atives in microarray studies by approximating and partitioning the empirical distribution of p-values. Bioinformatics 19, 123601242. Salome, D. (1998). Staristical Inference via Fiducial Methods. Ph.D. thesis, University of Gronin- gen. 544 JAN HANNIG Searle, S. R., Casella, G. and McCulloch, C. E. (1992). Variance Components. John Wiley & Sons, New York. Stevens, W. L. (1950). Fiducial limits of the parameter of a discontinuous distribution. Biometrika 37, 117-129. Tsui, K.-W. and Weerahandi, S. (1989). Generalized p-values in significance testing of hypothe- ses in the presence of nuisance parameters. J. Amer. Statist. Assoc. 84, 602-607. Wang, C. M. and Iyer, H. K. (2005). Propagation of uncertainties in measurements using gen- eralized inference. Metrologia 42, 145-153. Wang, C. M. and Iyer, H. K. (2006a). A generalized confidence interval for a measurand in the presence of type-A and type-B uncertainties. Measurement 39, 856–863. Wang, C. M. and Iyer, H. K. (2006b). Uncertainty analysis for vector measurands using fiducial inference. Metrologia 43, 486-494. Weerahandi, S. (1993). Generalized confidence intervals. J. Amer. Statist. Assoc. 88, 899-905. Weerahandi, S. (2004). Generalized Inference in Repeated Measures. Wiley, Hoboken, NJ. Wilkinson, G. N. (1977). On resolving the controversy in statistical inference. J. Roy. Statist. Soc. Ser. B 39, 119-171. With discussion. Yeo, I.-K. and Johnson, R. A. (2001). A uniform strong law of large numbers for U-statistics with application to transforming to near symmetry. Statist. Probab. Lett. 51, 63-69. Zabell, S. L. (1992). R. A. Fisher and the fiducial argument. Statist. Sci. 7, 369-387. Department of Statistics and Operations Research, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3260, U.S.A. E-mail: hannig@unc.edu (Received November 2006; accepted December 2007) The article i got this from is Statistica Sinica 19 (2009), 491-544 ON GENERALIZED FIDUCIAL INFERENCE∗ Jan Hannig The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
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Just to add to what is said, there was controversy between Fisher and Neyman about significance testing and interval estimation. Neyman defined confidence intervals while Fisher introduced fiducial intervals. They argued differently about their construction but the constructed intervals were usually the same. So the difference in the definitions was largely ignored until it was discovered that they differed when dealing with the Behrens-Fisher problem. Fisher argued adamantly for the fiducial appraoch but inspite of his brillance and his strong advocation of the method, there appeared to be flaws and since the statistical community considers it discredited it is not commonly discussed or used. The Bayesian and frequentist approaches to inference are the two that remain. |
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Fiducial inference sometimes interprets likelihoods as probabilities for the parameter $\theta$. That is, $M(x)L(\theta|x)$, provided that $M(x)$ is finite, is interpreted as a probability density function for $\theta$ in which $L(\theta|x)$ is the likelihood function of $\theta$ and $M(x)=(\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}L(\theta|x)d\theta)^{-1}$. You can see Casella and Berger, pages 291-2, for more details. |
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