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Inference for Change Point and Post Change Means After a CUSUM Test
Yanhong Wu
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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | 2005 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-0-387-22927-0
ISBN electrónico
978-0-387-26269-7
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2005
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer Science+Business Media, Inc. 2005
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
CUSUM Procedure
Yanhong Wu
Reports on teaching applications and modelling in eight countries dealt with similar arguments regarding obstacles, each with a different emphasis. The following four obstacles are seem to be common across eight countries in which applications and modelling are located within the national curriculum; “Teachers’ perceptions of mathematics”, “Teachers’ understanding of modelling”, “A lack of adequate textbooks and curricular modelling tasks”, “A lack of adequate assessment, and of modelling tasks in central examinations”.
Pp. 1-13
Change-Point Estimation
Yanhong Wu
Reports on teaching applications and modelling in eight countries dealt with similar arguments regarding obstacles, each with a different emphasis. The following four obstacles are seem to be common across eight countries in which applications and modelling are located within the national curriculum; “Teachers’ perceptions of mathematics”, “Teachers’ understanding of modelling”, “A lack of adequate textbooks and curricular modelling tasks”, “A lack of adequate assessment, and of modelling tasks in central examinations”.
Pp. 15-35
Confidence Interval for Change-Point
Yanhong Wu
Reports on teaching applications and modelling in eight countries dealt with similar arguments regarding obstacles, each with a different emphasis. The following four obstacles are seem to be common across eight countries in which applications and modelling are located within the national curriculum; “Teachers’ perceptions of mathematics”, “Teachers’ understanding of modelling”, “A lack of adequate textbooks and curricular modelling tasks”, “A lack of adequate assessment, and of modelling tasks in central examinations”.
Pp. 37-44
Inference for Post-Change Mean
Yanhong Wu
Reports on teaching applications and modelling in eight countries dealt with similar arguments regarding obstacles, each with a different emphasis. The following four obstacles are seem to be common across eight countries in which applications and modelling are located within the national curriculum; “Teachers’ perceptions of mathematics”, “Teachers’ understanding of modelling”, “A lack of adequate textbooks and curricular modelling tasks”, “A lack of adequate assessment, and of modelling tasks in central examinations”.
Pp. 45-65
Estimation After False Signal
Yanhong Wu
Reports on teaching applications and modelling in eight countries dealt with similar arguments regarding obstacles, each with a different emphasis. The following four obstacles are seem to be common across eight countries in which applications and modelling are located within the national curriculum; “Teachers’ perceptions of mathematics”, “Teachers’ understanding of modelling”, “A lack of adequate textbooks and curricular modelling tasks”, “A lack of adequate assessment, and of modelling tasks in central examinations”.
Pp. 67-79
Inference with Change in Variance
Yanhong Wu
Reports on teaching applications and modelling in eight countries dealt with similar arguments regarding obstacles, each with a different emphasis. The following four obstacles are seem to be common across eight countries in which applications and modelling are located within the national curriculum; “Teachers’ perceptions of mathematics”, “Teachers’ understanding of modelling”, “A lack of adequate textbooks and curricular modelling tasks”, “A lack of adequate assessment, and of modelling tasks in central examinations”.
Pp. 81-102
Sequential Classification and Segmentation
Yanhong Wu
Reports on teaching applications and modelling in eight countries dealt with similar arguments regarding obstacles, each with a different emphasis. The following four obstacles are seem to be common across eight countries in which applications and modelling are located within the national curriculum; “Teachers’ perceptions of mathematics”, “Teachers’ understanding of modelling”, “A lack of adequate textbooks and curricular modelling tasks”, “A lack of adequate assessment, and of modelling tasks in central examinations”.
Pp. 103-115
An Adaptive CUSUM Procedure
Yanhong Wu
Reports on teaching applications and modelling in eight countries dealt with similar arguments regarding obstacles, each with a different emphasis. The following four obstacles are seem to be common across eight countries in which applications and modelling are located within the national curriculum; “Teachers’ perceptions of mathematics”, “Teachers’ understanding of modelling”, “A lack of adequate textbooks and curricular modelling tasks”, “A lack of adequate assessment, and of modelling tasks in central examinations”.
Pp. 117-132
Dependent Observation Case
Yanhong Wu
Reports on teaching applications and modelling in eight countries dealt with similar arguments regarding obstacles, each with a different emphasis. The following four obstacles are seem to be common across eight countries in which applications and modelling are located within the national curriculum; “Teachers’ perceptions of mathematics”, “Teachers’ understanding of modelling”, “A lack of adequate textbooks and curricular modelling tasks”, “A lack of adequate assessment, and of modelling tasks in central examinations”.
Pp. 133-143
Other Methods and Remarks
Yanhong Wu
Reports on teaching applications and modelling in eight countries dealt with similar arguments regarding obstacles, each with a different emphasis. The following four obstacles are seem to be common across eight countries in which applications and modelling are located within the national curriculum; “Teachers’ perceptions of mathematics”, “Teachers’ understanding of modelling”, “A lack of adequate textbooks and curricular modelling tasks”, “A lack of adequate assessment, and of modelling tasks in central examinations”.
Pp. 145-150