[R] Fwd: The StructTS method
Prof Brian Ripley
ripley at stats.ox.ac.uk
Sat Mar 24 07:44:31 CET 2012
On 23/03/2012 18:43, Fretheim, Alexander H wrote:
>
>
> To whomever it may concern,
>
> I'm a young Industrial Engineer working on Senior Design at Georgia
> Tech and have found the StructTS method to be excellent for the
> training set for my forecasting project. There's only one problem: I
> don't actually understand what a Structural Time Series IS. I've
> looked up resources on it, and get that essentially you're dividing
> the Time Series in to additive components dependent on time, but have
> no idea how your method works or why. I've also looked at the
> documentation, which is great from a programmers standpoint and gives
> at least a basic format but without any idea as to how optimization
> occurs. Would you be able to even just supply some C code (which I
> could open in notebook, hopefully) showing how the method
> works/optimizes/heuristically recommends and why?
This is what references are for. From ?StructTS:
References:
Brockwell, P. J. & Davis, R. A. (1996). _Introduction to Time
Series and Forecasting_. Springer, New York. Sections 8.2 and
8.5.
Durbin, J. and Koopman, S. J. (2001) _Time Series Analysis by
State Space Methods._ Oxford University Press.
Harvey, A. C. (1989) _Forecasting, Structural Time Series Models
and the Kalman Filter_. Cambridge University Press.
Harvey, A. C. (1993) _Time Series Models_. 2nd Edition, Harvester
Wheatsheaf.
The last is the best place to start. R is *not* a statistics tutorial.
Beyond that, R is Open Source and you can read all the source code for
yourself.
> Sincerely,
>
> Alexander Fretheim
--
Brian D. Ripley, ripley at stats.ox.ac.uk
Professor of Applied Statistics, http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~ripley/
University of Oxford, Tel: +44 1865 272861 (self)
1 South Parks Road, +44 1865 272866 (PA)
Oxford OX1 3TG, UK Fax: +44 1865 272595
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