Department Seminar by Martin Larsson, Carnegie Mellon University

Friday, August 21, 2020 10:30 am - 11:30 am EDT (GMT -04:00)

Optimal supermartingales for anytime-valid sequential testing


Statistical testing is`anytime-valid’ if the decision to stop or continue an experiment can depend on anything that has been observed so far, without compromising statistical error guarantees. For instance, suppose that a promising but inconclusive study receives funding to gather additional data. Then standard p-value analysis is invalidated, but anytime-valid testing is not. A recent approach to anytime-valid testing views a test statistic as a bet against the null hypothesis. These bets are constrained to be supermartingales - hence unprofitable - under the null, but designed to be profitable under the relevant alternative hypotheses. This perspective opens the door to using tools from financial mathematics. In this talk I will explain how notions such as supermartingale measures, fork-convexity, the optional decomposition theorem, and universal portfolios can be used to design optimal supermartingales for anytime-valid sequential testing. (This talk is based on ongoing work with Aaditya Ramdas (CMU) and Johannes Ruf (LSE).) 

Please Note: This talk will be given through Webex. To join, please click here: Department seminar by Martin Larsson