The performances of data-driven bandwidth selection procedures in local polynomial regression are investigated by using asymptotic methods and simulation. The bandwidth selection procedures considered are based on minimizing 'prelimit' approximations to the (conditional) mean-squared error (MSE) when the MSE is considered as a function of the bandwidth h. We first consider approximations to the MSE that are based on Taylor expansions around h = 0 of the bias part of the MSE. These approximations lead to estimators of the MSE that are accurate only for small bandwidths h. We also consider a bias estimator which instead of using small h approximations to bias naïvely estimates bias as the difference of two local polynomial estimators of different order and we show that this estimator performs well only for moderate to large h. We next define a hybrid bias estimator which equals the Taylor-expansion-based estimator for small h and the difference estimator for moderate to large h. We find that the MSE estimator based on this hybrid bias estimator leads to a bandwidth selection procedure with good asymptotic and, for our Monte Carlo examples, finite sample properties.
CITATION STYLE
Doksum, K., Peterson, D., & Samarov, A. (2000). On variable bandwidth selection in local polynomial regression. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series B: Statistical Methodology, 62(3), 431–448. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9868.00242
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