What is it about?

Despite the unobserved components model (UCM) having many advantages over more popular forecasting techniques based on regression analysis, exponential smoothing, and ARIMA, the UCM is not well known among practitioners outside the academic community. Time Series Modelling with Unobserved Components rectifies this deficiency by giving a practical overview of the UCM approach, covering some theoretical details, several applications, and the software for implementing UCMs. The book’s first part discusses introductory time series and prediction theory. Unlike most other books on time series, this text includes a chapter on prediction at the beginning because the problem of predicting is not limited to the field of time series analysis. The second part introduces the UCM, the state space form, and related algorithms. It also provides practical modeling strategies to build and select the UCM that best fits the needs of time series analysts. The third part presents real-world applications, with a chapter focusing on business cycle analysis and the construction of band-pass filters using UCMs. The book also reviews software packages that offer ready-to-use procedures for UCMs as well as systems popular among statisticians and econometricians that allow general estimation of models in state space form. This book demonstrates the numerous benefits of using UCMs to model time series data. UCMs are simple to specify, their results are easy to visualize and communicate to non-specialists, and their forecasting performance is competitive. Moreover, various types of outliers can easily be identified, missing values are effortlessly managed, and working contemporaneously with time series observed at different frequencies poses no problem.

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Why is it important?

1. Focuses on the UCM approach rather than general state space modeling. 2. Includes detailed worked examples and case studies that highlight applications in economics and business. 3. Discusses the available software for UCM, including SAS, Stamp, R, and Stata. 4. Provides enough theory so that readers understand the underlying mechanisms. 5. Keeps the mathematical rigor to a minimum, making the book suitable for undergraduate students. 6. Offers the data and code on a supplementary website.

Perspectives

I hope this book will spread the use of unobserved component models among practitioners.

Professor Matteo M Pelagatti
Universita degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca

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This page is a summary of: Time Series Modelling with Unobserved Components, July 2015, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1201/b18766.
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