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Kuiper's test
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==One-sample Kuiper test== [[File:KuiperTestVisualization 2Sample.png|thumb|300px|Illustration of the two-sample Kuiper Test statistic. Red and blue lines each correspond to an empirical distribution function, and the black arrows show the points distances which sum to the Kuiper Statistic.]] The one-sample test statistic, <math>V_n</math>, for Kuiper's test is defined as follows. Let ''F'' be the continuous [[cumulative distribution function]] which is to be the [[null hypothesis]]. Denote by ''F''<sub>''n''</sub> the [[empirical distribution function]] for ''n'' [[Independent and identically distributed random variables|independent and identically distributed]] (i.i.d.) observations ''X<sub>i</sub>'', which is defined as :<math> F_{n}(x)=\frac{\text {number of (elements in the sample} \leq x)}{n}=\frac{1}{n} \sum_{i=1}^{n} 1_{(-\infty,x]}(X_{i}), </math> :where <math>1_{(-\infty,x]}(X_i)</math> is the [[indicator function]], equal to 1 if <math>X_i \le x</math> and equal to 0 otherwise. Then the one-sided [[Kolmogorov–Smirnov test|Kolmogorov–Smirnov]] [[statistic]] for the given [[cumulative distribution function]] ''F''(''x'') is :<math>D^+_n = \sup_x [F_n(x)-F(x)],</math> :<math>D^-_n = \sup_x [F(x)-F_n(x)],</math> where <math>\sup</math> is the [[Infimum and supremum|supremum function]]. And finally the one-sample Kuiper test is defined as, :<math>V_n=D^+_n + D^-_n ,</math> or equivalently :<math>V_n=\sup_x [F_n(x)-F(x)] - \inf_x [F_n(x)-F(x)] ,</math> where <math>\inf</math> is the [[Infimum and supremum|infimum function]]. Tables for the critical points of the test statistic <math>V_n</math> are available,<ref>[[Egon Pearson|Pearson, E.S.]], Hartley, H.O. (1972) ''Biometrika Tables for Statisticians, Volume 2'', CUP. {{isbn|0-521-06937-8}} (Table 54)</ref> and these include certain cases where the distribution being tested is not fully known, so that parameters of the family of distributions are [[estimation theory|estimated]]. The [[asymptotic distribution]] of the statistic <math>\sqrt{n}V_n</math> is given by,<ref name=K1960>{{cite journal | last= Kuiper | first=N. H. |author-link=Nicolaas Kuiper | year = 1960 | title = Tests concerning random points on a circle | journal = Proceedings of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen, Series A | volume = 63 | pages = 38–47 }}</ref> :<math> \begin{align} \operatorname{Pr}(\sqrt{n}V_n\leq x)=&1-2\sum_{k=1}^\infty (-1)^{k-1} (4k^2x^2-1)e^{-2k^2 x^2} \\ &+\frac{8}{3\sqrt{n}}x\sum_{k=1}^\infty k^2(4k^2x^2-3)e^{-2k^2 x^2}+\omicron(\frac{1}{n}). \end{align} </math> For <math>x>\frac{6}{5}</math>, a reasonable approximation is obtained from the first term of the series as follows :<math>1 - 2(4x^2-1)e^{-2x^2}+\frac{8x}{3\sqrt{n}}(4x^2-3)e^{-2x^2}.</math>
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