|
In statistics, a portmanteau test tests whether any of a group of autocorrelations of a time series are different from zero. Among portmanteau tests are both the Ljung-Box test and the (now obsolete) Box-Pierce test. The portmanteau test is useful in working with ARIMA models. The Ljung-Box test statistic is calculated as
The Ljung-Box (1978) test is an improvement over the Box-Pierce (1970) test, whose statistic was The problem with the Box-Pierce statistic was bad performance in small samples. The Ljung-Box test is better for all sample sizes including small ones. Word originIn French the word portmanteau refers to a coat rack. Just as a coat rack can hold many items of clothing (each on its own hook), a portmanteau test can be used to test multiple autocorrelation coefficients for significance.[citation needed] References
|
This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.