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Statistica Sinica 22 (2012), 1589-1610

doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.5705/ss.2010.224





QUANTILE TOMOGRAPHY: USING QUANTILES WITH

MULTIVARIATE DATA


Linglong Kong and Ivan Mizera


University of Alberta


Abstract: The use of quantiles to obtain insights about multivariate data is addressed. It is argued that incisive insights can be obtained by considering directional quantiles, the quantiles of projections. Directional quantile envelopes are proposed as a way to condense this kind of information; it is demonstrated that they are essentially halfspace (Tukey) depth levels sets, coinciding for elliptic distributions (in particular multivariate normal) with density contours. Relevant questions concerning their indexing, the possibility of the reverse retrieval of directional quantile information, invariance with respect to affine transformations, and approximation/asymptotic properties are studied. It is argued that analysis in terms of directional quantiles and their envelopes offers a straightforward probabilistic interpretation and thus conveys a concrete quantitative meaning; the directional definition can be adapted to elaborate frameworks, like estimation of extreme quantiles and directional quantile regression, the regression of depth contours on covariates. The latter facilitates the construction of multivariate growth charts--the question that motivated this development.



Key words and phrases: Data depth, growth charts, quantile regression, quantiles.

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