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Main Authors: Liu, Rui, Hannig, Jan, Marron, J. S.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.27023
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author Liu, Rui
Hannig, Jan
Marron, J. S.
author_facet Liu, Rui
Hannig, Jan
Marron, J. S.
contents Smoothing methods find signals in noisy data. A challenge for Statistical inference is the choice of smoothing parameter. SiZer addressed this challenge in one-dimension by detecting significant slopes across multiple scales, but was not a completely valid testing procedure. This was addressed by the development of an advanced distribution theory that ensures fully valid inference in the 1-D setting by applying extreme value theory. A two-dimensional extension of SiZer, known as Significance in Scale Space (SSS), was developed for image data, enabling the detection of both slopes and curvatures across multiple spatial scales. However, fully valid inference for 2-D SSS has remained unavailable, largely due to the more complex dependence structure of random fields. In this paper, we use a completely different probability methodology which gives an advanced distribution theory for SSS, establishing a valid hypothesis testing procedure for both slope and curvature detection. When applied to pure noise images (no true underlying signal), the proposed method controls the Type I error, whereas the original SSS identifies spurious features across scales. When signal is present, the proposed method maintains a high level of statistical power, successfully identifying important true slopes and curvatures in real data such as gamma camera images.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2510_27023
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Advanced Distribution Theory for Significance in Scale Space
Liu, Rui
Hannig, Jan
Marron, J. S.
Statistics Theory
Smoothing methods find signals in noisy data. A challenge for Statistical inference is the choice of smoothing parameter. SiZer addressed this challenge in one-dimension by detecting significant slopes across multiple scales, but was not a completely valid testing procedure. This was addressed by the development of an advanced distribution theory that ensures fully valid inference in the 1-D setting by applying extreme value theory. A two-dimensional extension of SiZer, known as Significance in Scale Space (SSS), was developed for image data, enabling the detection of both slopes and curvatures across multiple spatial scales. However, fully valid inference for 2-D SSS has remained unavailable, largely due to the more complex dependence structure of random fields. In this paper, we use a completely different probability methodology which gives an advanced distribution theory for SSS, establishing a valid hypothesis testing procedure for both slope and curvature detection. When applied to pure noise images (no true underlying signal), the proposed method controls the Type I error, whereas the original SSS identifies spurious features across scales. When signal is present, the proposed method maintains a high level of statistical power, successfully identifying important true slopes and curvatures in real data such as gamma camera images.
title Advanced Distribution Theory for Significance in Scale Space
topic Statistics Theory
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.27023