Domain selection and familywise error rate for functional data: A unified framework.
Konrad AbramowiczAlessia PiniLina SchelinSara Sjöstedt de LunaAymeric StammSimone VantiniPublished in: Biometrics (2022)
Functional data are smooth, often continuous, random curves, which can be seen as an extreme case of multivariate data with infinite dimensionality. Just as componentwise inference for multivariate data naturally performs feature selection, subsetwise inference for functional data performs domain selection. In this paper, we present a unified testing framework for domain selection on populations of functional data. In detail, p-values of hypothesis tests performed on pointwise evaluations of functional data are suitably adjusted for providing control of the familywise error rate (FWER) over a family of subsets of the domain. We show that several state-of-the-art domain selection methods fit within this framework and differ from each other by the choice of the family over which the control of the FWER is provided. In the existing literature, these families are always defined a priori. In this work, we also propose a novel approach, coined thresholdwise testing, in which the family of subsets is instead built in a data-driven fashion. The method seamlessly generalizes to multidimensional domains in contrast to methods based on a priori defined families. We provide theoretical results with respect to consistency and control of the FWER for the methods within the unified framework. We illustrate the performance of the methods within the unified framework on simulated and real data examples and compare their performance with other existing methods.