scholarly journals Bayesian approach to landing page testing

Author(s):  
Ya. S. Bondarenko ◽  
S. V. Kravchenko

In this paper a Bayesian inference to conversion rate optimization is considered. Bayesian A/B/C testing methodology with the expected value of the loss function computed analytically is proposed. Bayesian A/B/C testing results are presented graphically and descriptively.

2020 ◽  
Vol 36 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. i675-i683
Author(s):  
Sudhir Kumar ◽  
Antonia Chroni ◽  
Koichiro Tamura ◽  
Maxwell Sanderford ◽  
Olumide Oladeinde ◽  
...  

Abstract Summary Metastases cause a vast majority of cancer morbidity and mortality. Metastatic clones are formed by dispersal of cancer cells to secondary tissues, and are not medically detected or visible until later stages of cancer development. Clone phylogenies within patients provide a means of tracing the otherwise inaccessible dynamic history of migrations of cancer cells. Here, we present a new Bayesian approach, PathFinder, for reconstructing the routes of cancer cell migrations. PathFinder uses the clone phylogeny, the number of mutational differences among clones, and the information on the presence and absence of observed clones in primary and metastatic tumors. By analyzing simulated datasets, we found that PathFinder performes well in reconstructing clone migrations from the primary tumor to new metastases as well as between metastases. It was more challenging to trace migrations from metastases back to primary tumors. We found that a vast majority of errors can be corrected by sampling more clones per tumor, and by increasing the number of genetic variants assayed per clone. We also identified situations in which phylogenetic approaches alone are not sufficient to reconstruct migration routes. In conclusion, we anticipate that the use of PathFinder will enable a more reliable inference of migration histories and their posterior probabilities, which is required to assess the relative preponderance of seeding of new metastasis by clones from primary tumors and/or existing metastases. Availability and implementation PathFinder is available on the web at https://github.com/SayakaMiura/PathFinder.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-39
Author(s):  
J. Mahanta ◽  
M. B. A. Talukdar

This paper is concerned with estimating the parameter of Rayleigh distribution (special case of two parameters Weibull distribution) by adopting Bayesian approach under squared error (SE), LINEX, MLINEX loss function. The performances of the obtained estimators for different types of loss functions are then compared. Better result is found in Bayesian approach under MLINEX loss function. Bayes risk of the estimators are also computed and presented in graphs.


Stats ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 111-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dewi Rahardja

We construct a point and interval estimation using a Bayesian approach for the difference of two population proportion parameters based on two independent samples of binomial data subject to one type of misclassification. Specifically, we derive an easy-to-implement closed-form algorithm for drawing from the posterior distributions. For illustration, we applied our algorithm to a real data example. Finally, we conduct simulation studies to demonstrate the efficiency of our algorithm for Bayesian inference.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Navid Feroz

This paper is concerned with estimation of the parameter of Burr type VIII distribution under a Bayesian framework using censored samples. The Bayes estimators and associated risks have been derived under the assumption of five priors and three loss functions. The comparison among the performance of different estimators has been made in terms of posterior risks. A simulation study has been conducted in order to assess and compare the performance of different estimators. The study proposes the use of inverse Levy prior based on quadratic loss function for Bayes estimation of the said parameter.


Author(s):  
Abdolnasser Sadeghkhani ◽  
Yingwei Peng ◽  
Devon Lin

This paper considers estimating the ratio of two distributions with different parameters and common supports. We consider a Bayesian approach based on the Log--Huber loss function which is resistant to outliers and useful to find robust M-estimators. We propose two different types of Bayesian density ratio estimators and compare their performance in terms of Bayesian risk function with themselves as well as the usual plug-in density ratio estimators. Some applications such as classification and divergence function estimation are addressed.


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