Consistency (statistics)
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In
statistics Statistics (from German: '' Statistik'', "description of a state, a country") is the discipline that concerns the collection, organization, analysis, interpretation, and presentation of data. In applying statistics to a scientific, indust ...
, consistency of procedures, such as computing
confidence interval In frequentist statistics, a confidence interval (CI) is a range of estimates for an unknown parameter. A confidence interval is computed at a designated ''confidence level''; the 95% confidence level is most common, but other levels, such as 9 ...
s or conducting hypothesis tests, is a desired property of their behaviour as the number of items in the data set to which they are applied increases indefinitely. In particular, consistency requires that the outcome of the procedure with unlimited data should identify the underlying truth.Dodge, Y. (2003) ''The Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms'', OUP. (entries for consistency, consistent estimator, consistent test) Use of the term in statistics derives from Sir Ronald Fisher in 1922. Use of the terms ''consistency'' and ''consistent'' in statistics is restricted to cases where essentially the same procedure can be applied to any number of data items. In complicated applications of statistics, there may be several ways in which the number of data items may grow. For example, records for rainfall within an area might increase in three ways: records for additional time periods; records for additional sites with a fixed area; records for extra sites obtained by extending the size of the area. In such cases, the property of consistency may be limited to one or more of the possible ways a sample size can grow.


Estimators

A consistent estimator is one for which, when the estimate is considered as a random variable indexed by the number ''n'' of items in the data set, as ''n'' increases the estimates converge in probability to the value that the estimator is designed to estimate. An estimator that has
Fisher consistency In statistics, Fisher consistency, named after Ronald Fisher, is a desirable property of an estimator asserting that if the estimator were calculated using the entire population rather than a sample, the true value of the estimated parameter would ...
is one for which, if the estimator were applied to the entire population rather than a sample, the true value of the estimated parameter would be obtained.


Tests

A consistent test is one for which the power of the test for a fixed untrue hypothesis increases to one as the number of data items increases.


Classification

In statistical classification, a consistent classifier is one for which the probability of correct classification, given a training set, approaches, as the size of the training set increases, the best probability theoretically possible if the population distributions were fully known.


Sparsistency

Let \mathbf be a vector and define the support \operatorname(\mathbf) = \ where \mathbf_i is the ith element of \mathbf . Let \hat be an estimator for \mathbf . Then sparsistency is the property that the support of the estimator converges to the true support as the number of samples grows to infinity. More formally, P(\operatorname(\hat) = \operatorname(\mathbf)) \rightarrow 1 as n\rightarrow \infty .


See also

* Consistent estimator *
Homogeneity (statistics) In statistics, homogeneity and its opposite, heterogeneity, arise in describing the properties of a dataset, or several datasets. They relate to the validity of the often convenient assumption that the statistical properties of any one part of an ...
* Internal consistency *
Reliability (statistics) In statistics and psychometrics, reliability is the overall consistency of a measure. A measure is said to have a high reliability if it produces similar results under consistent conditions:"It is the characteristic of a set of test scores that ...


References

{{reflist Asymptotic theory (statistics)