Chapter 2. Bootstrapping
As seen in the previous chapter, statistical inference is enhanced to a very large extent with the use of computational power. We also looked at the process of permutation tests, wherein the same test is applied multiple times for the resamples of the given data under the (null) hypothesis. The rationale behind resampling methods is also similar; we believe that if the sample is truly random and the observations are generated from the same identical distribution, we have a valid reason to resample the same set of observations with replacements. This is because any observation might as well occur multiple times rather than as a single instance.
This chapter will begin with a formal definition of resampling, followed by a look at the jackknife technique. This will be applied to multiple, albeit relatively easier, problems, and we will look at the definition of the pseudovalues first. The bootstrap method, invented by Efron, is probably the most useful resampling...