Abstract
Abstract Empirical likelihood methods are developed for constructing confidence bands in problems of nonparametric density estimation. These techniques have an advantage over more conventional methods in that the shape of the bands is determined solely by the data. We show how to construct an empirical likelihood functional, rather than a function, and contour it to produce the confidence bands. Analogs of Wilks's theorem are established in this infinite-parameter setting and may be used to select the appropriate contour. An alternative calibration, based on the bootstrap, is also suggested. Large-sample theory is developed to show that the bands have asymptotically correct coverage, and a numerical example is presented to demonstrate the technique. Comparisons are made with the use of bootstrap replications to choose both the shape and size of the bands.
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