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Original Articles

The t-transformed power method distributions for simulating univariate and multivariate non-normal distributions

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Pages 825-846 | Received 20 May 2018, Accepted 05 Jul 2018, Published online: 13 Nov 2018
 

Abstract

This paper introduces a family of t-transformed power method distributions for fitting empirical and theoretical distributions with a wide range of skew and kurtosis values. Equations associated with the first four product moments (mean, variance, skew, and kurtosis) are derived and a methodology is subsequently illustrated for simulating univariate non-normal distributions based on the moment matching approach. Also included is a methodology for generating multivariate non-normal distributions correlated at the user-specified Pearson correlation matrix. The Monte Carlo simulation results indicate that the proposed methodology produces excellent agreement between estimates of Pearson correlations, skew, and kurtosis and their corresponding parameter values.

Acknowledgments

The author would like to express sincere thanks to anonymous reviewers for reviewing this manuscript.

Conflict of interest

The author would like to state that there are no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this article.

Data availability statement

The following are the steps (websites) employed for obataining data associated with and of this study:

  1. The data used in were obtained by drawing a random sample of n=2,000 observations from the tdf=4 distribution using Mathematica (version 9) (Wolfram Research, Inc. Citation2012) function RandomVariate with random seed = 232.

  2. The three datasets (i.e., Hip data, Chest data, and Thigh data) used in were downloaded from the website http://lib.stat.cmu.edu/datasets/bodyfat.

Supplementary material

Provided in Appendixes A and B are two R (version 3.4.2) (R Core Team Citation2017) algorithms for generating estimates of Pearson correlations and estimates (γ̂3 and γ̂4) of skew and kurtosis, respectively, associated with the four distributions in . These Appendixes will appear online only. Using these two algorithms, a user can generate corresponding estimates shown in and , respectively.

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