Hpi(x, nstage=2, pilot, pre="sphere", Hstart, binned=FALSE, bgridsize, amise=FALSE, deriv.order=0, verbose=FALSE, optim.fun="nlm")
Hpi.diag(x, nstage=2, pilot, pre="scale", Hstart, binned=FALSE, bgridsize, amise=FALSE, deriv.order=0, verbose=FALSE, optim.fun="nlm")
hpi(x, nstage=2, binned=TRUE, bgridsize, deriv.order=0)pre.scale, "sphere" = pre.sphereamise=TRUE then the minimal scaled PI value is returned too.hpi(,deriv.order=0) is the univariate plug-in
selector of Wand & Jones (1994), i.e. it is exactly the same as
KernSmooth's dpik. For deriv.order>0, the formula is
taken from Wand & Jones (1995). Hpi is a multivariate
generalisation of this. Use Hpi for full bandwidth matrices and
Hpi.diag for diagonal bandwidth matrices. The default pilot is "samse" for d=2,r=0, and
"dscalar" otherwise.
For AMSE pilot bandwidths, see Wand & Jones (1994). For
SAMSE pilot bandwidths, see Duong & Hazelton (2003). The latter is a
modification of the former, in order to remove any possible problems
with non-positive definiteness. Unconstrained and higher order
derivative pilot bandwidths are from Chacon & Duong (2010).
For d=1, 2, 3, 4 and binned=TRUE,
estimates are computed over a binning grid defined
by bgridsize. Otherwise it's computed exactly.
If Hstart is not given then it defaults to Hns(x).
Hbcv, Hlscv, Hscvdata(unicef)
Hpi(unicef, pilot="dscalar")
hpi(unicef[,1])
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