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esl_gamma.tex
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esl_gamma.tex
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\begin{tabular}{lcll}\hline
Variate & $x$ & \ccode{double} & $\mu \leq x < \infty$ \\
Location & $\mu$ & \ccode{double} & $-\infty < \mu < \infty$\\
Scale & $\lambda$ & \ccode{double} & $\lambda > 0$ \\
Shape & $\tau$ & \ccode{double} & $\tau > 0$ \\ \hline
\end{tabular}
The probability density function (PDF) is:
\begin{equation}
P(X=x) = \frac{\lambda^{\tau}}{\Gamma(\tau)} (x-\mu)^{\tau-1} e^{-\lambda (x - \mu)}
\label{eqn:gamma_pdf}
\end{equation}
The cumulative distribution function (CDF) does not have an analytical
expression. It is calculated numerically, using the incomplete Gamma
function (\ccode{esl\_stats\_IncompleteGamma()}).
The ``standard Gamma distribution'' has $\mu = 0$, $\lambda = 1$.
\subsection{Sampling}
\subsection{Parameter estimation}
\subsubsection{Complete data; known location}
We usually know the location $\mu$. It is often 0, or in the case of
fitting a gamma density to a right tail, we know the threshold $\mu$
at which we truncated the tail.
Given a complete dataset of $N$ observed samples $x_i$ ($i=1..N$) and
a \emph{known} location parameter $\mu$, maximum likelihood estimation
of $\lambda$ and $\tau$ is performed by first solving this rootfinding
equation for $\hat{\tau}$ by binary search:
\begin{equation}
\log \hat{\tau}
- \Psi(\hat{\tau})
- \log \left[ \frac{1}{N} \sum_{i=1}^{N} (x_i - \mu) \right]
+ \frac{1}{N} \sum_{i=1}^N \log (x_i - \mu)
\label{eqn:gamma_tau_root}
\end{equation}
then using that to obtain $\hat{\lambda}$:
\begin{equation}
\hat{\lambda} = \frac{N \hat{\tau}} {\sum_{i=1}^{N} (x_i - \mu)}
\end{equation}
Equation~\ref{eqn:gamma_tau_root} decreases as $\tau$ increases.