Journal of Probability and Statistics
Volume 2012 (2012), Article ID 473932, 13 pages
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/473932
Research Article

Empirical Likelihood for Multidimensional Linear Model with Missing Responses

Department of Mathematics, Changji College, Changji, Xinjiang 831100, China

Received 20 June 2011; Accepted 4 January 2012

Academic Editor: Rongling Wu

Copyright © 2012 Liping Zhu. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Abstract

Imputation is a popular technique for handling missing data especially for plenty of missing values. Usually, the empirical log-likelihood ratio statistic under imputation is asymptotically scaled chi-squared because the imputing data are not i.i.d. Recently, a bias-corrected technique is used to study linear regression model with missing response data, and the resulting empirical likelihood ratio is asymptotically chi-squared. However, it may suffer from the “the curse of high dimension” in multidimensional linear regression models for the nonparametric estimator of selection probability function. In this paper, a parametric selection probability function is introduced to avoid the dimension problem. With the similar bias-corrected method, the proposed empirical likelihood statistic is asymptotically chi-squared when the selection probability is specified correctly and even asymptotically scaled chi-squared when specified incorrectly. In addition, our empirical likelihood estimator is always consistent whether the selection probability is specified correctly or not, and will achieve full efficiency when specified correctly. A simulation study indicates that the proposed method is comparable in terms of coverage probabilities.