scholarly journals Bias-corrected maximum-likelihood estimation of multiplicity of infection and lineage frequencies

PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (12) ◽  
pp. e0261889
Author(s):  
Meraj Hashemi ◽  
Kristan A. Schneider

Background The UN’s Sustainable Development Goals are devoted to eradicate a range of infectious diseases to achieve global well-being. These efforts require monitoring disease transmission at a level that differentiates between pathogen variants at the genetic/molecular level. In fact, the advantages of genetic (molecular) measures like multiplicity of infection (MOI) over traditional metrics, e.g., R0, are being increasingly recognized. MOI refers to the presence of multiple pathogen variants within an infection due to multiple infective contacts. Maximum-likelihood (ML) methods have been proposed to derive MOI and pathogen-lineage frequencies from molecular data. However, these methods are biased. Methods and findings Based on a single molecular marker, we derive a bias-corrected ML estimator for MOI and pathogen-lineage frequencies. We further improve these estimators by heuristical adjustments that compensate shortcomings in the derivation of the bias correction, which implicitly assumes that data lies in the interior of the observational space. The finite sample properties of the different variants of the bias-corrected estimators are investigated by a systematic simulation study. In particular, we investigate the performance of the estimator in terms of bias, variance, and robustness against model violations. The corrections successfully remove bias except for extreme parameters that likely yield uninformative data, which cannot sustain accurate parameter estimation. Heuristic adjustments further improve the bias correction, particularly for small sample sizes. The bias corrections also reduce the estimators’ variances, which coincide with the Cramér-Rao lower bound. The estimators are reasonably robust against model violations. Conclusions Applying bias corrections can substantially improve the quality of MOI estimates, particularly in areas of low as well as areas of high transmission—in both cases estimates tend to be biased. The bias-corrected estimators are (almost) unbiased and their variance coincides with the Cramér-Rao lower bound, suggesting that no further improvements are possible unless additional information is provided. Additional information can be obtained by combining data from several molecular markers, or by including information that allows stratifying the data into heterogeneous groups.

2012 ◽  
Vol 02 (02) ◽  
pp. 1250008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory R. Duffee ◽  
Richard H. Stanton

We study the finite-sample properties of some of the standard techniques used to estimate modern term structure models. For sample sizes and models similar to those used in most empirical work, we reach three surprising conclusions. First, while maximum likelihood works well for simple models, it produces strongly biased parameter estimates when the model includes a flexible specification of the dynamics of interest rate risk. Second, despite having the same asymptotic efficiency as maximum likelihood, the small-sample performance of Efficient Method of Moments (a commonly used method for estimating complicated models) is unacceptable even in the simplest term structure settings. Third, the linearized Kalman filter is a tractable and reasonably accurate estimation technique, which we recommend in settings where maximum likelihood is impractical.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 1-28
Author(s):  
Buddhika Nettasinghe ◽  
Vikram Krishnamurthy

This article considers the problem of estimating a power-law degree distribution of an undirected network using sampled data. Although power-law degree distributions are ubiquitous in nature, the widely used parametric methods for estimating them (e.g., linear regression on double-logarithmic axes and maximum likelihood estimation with uniformly sampled nodes) suffer from the large variance introduced by the lack of data-points from the tail portion of the power-law degree distribution. As a solution, we present a novel maximum likelihood estimation approach that exploits the friendship paradox to sample more efficiently from the tail of the degree distribution. We analytically show that the proposed method results in a smaller bias, variance and a Cramèr–Rao lower bound compared to the vanilla maximum likelihood estimate obtained with uniformly sampled nodes (which is the most commonly used method in literature). Detailed numerical and empirical results are presented to illustrate the performance of the proposed method under different conditions and how it compares with alternative methods. We also show that the proposed method and its desirable properties (i.e., smaller bias, variance, and Cramèr–Rao lower bound compared to vanilla method based on uniform samples) extend to parametric degree distributions other than the power-law such as exponential degree distributions as well. All the numerical and empirical results are reproducible and the code is publicly available on Github.


2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonis Demos ◽  
Dimitra Kyriakopoulou

AbstractWe derive the analytical expressions of bias approximations for maximum likelihood (ML) and quasi-maximum likelihood (QML) estimators of the EGARCH (1,1) parameters that enable us to correct after the bias of all estimators. The bias-correction mechanism is constructed under the specification of two methods that are analytically described. We also evaluate the residual bootstrapped estimator as a measure of performance. Monte Carlo simulations indicate that, for given sets of parameters values, the bias corrections work satisfactory for all parameters. The proposed full-step estimator performs better than the classical one and is also faster than the bootstrap. The results can be also used to formulate the approximate Edgeworth distribution of the estimators.


1969 ◽  
Vol 47 (6) ◽  
pp. 665-686 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Lycklama ◽  
T. J. Kennett ◽  
L. B. Hughes

The effects of small sample sizes have been studied in estimating the number of degrees of freedom of nuclear reaction widths distributions using the method of maximum likelihood, the method of moments, and the method of minimization of variance. It is found that the estimates are biased as a function of the sample size and the number of degrees of freedom of the widths distribution. Bias is reduced somewhat by applying the estimation techniques to the finite sample transformation of the chi-squared distribution, the beta distribution. The efficiency of each estimation technique is indicated by comparison of the variances of the estimates to the minimum variance obtainable. A modified maximum likelihood estimator is found to be unbiased and efficient.


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