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Activity Number: 113 - Nonlinear and Nonstationary Dependent Processes: Modeling, Inference, and Applications
Type: Invited
Date/Time: Monday, August 9, 2021 : 1:30 PM to 3:20 PM
Sponsor: Business and Economic Statistics Section
Abstract #316765
Title: A Bayesian Framework for Modeling Outliers in Time Series in Post COVID-19 Era
Author(s): Anindya Roy* and Tucker Sprague McElroy
Companies: U.S. Census Bureau/ UMBC and US Census Bureau
Keywords: Covid-19; Crisis; Extremes; Signal Extraction; Seasonal adjustment
Abstract:

A conventional approach to the extraction of latent components in a time series is to first model extreme values and outliers (including level shifts and seasonal outliers) as fixed effects, followed by their removal. Then the extreme-value adjusted series can be filtered using linear (Gaussian) techniques. A drawback is that identification of the epochs of extreme values is needed, and the uncertainty pertaining to this identification -- as well as the removal of extremes -- goes unmeasured. Alternatively, each type of outlier effect can be modeled as a particular type of latent stochastic process driven by heavy-tailed innovations; extraction of latent components then follows non-linear techniques, and does not require identification of extreme epochs. We model monthly retail data impacted by the Covid-19 epidemic by incorporating additive outliers and level shifts as heavy-tailed latent processes, and estimate the unknown parameters through a Bayesian approach that utilizes Gibbs sampling. As a result, we can extract retail trends that incorporate stochastic level shifts and a full measure of the extraction uncertainty.


Authors who are presenting talks have a * after their name.

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