pith. sign in

hub Canonical reference

30 Leland McInnes, John Healy, and Steve Astels

Canonical reference. 71% of citing Pith papers cite this work as background.

42 Pith papers citing it
Background 71% of classified citations

hub tools

citation-role summary

background 5 dataset 1 method 1

citation-polarity summary

clear filters

representative citing papers

The Dynamical Origin of Millimetre-Sized Sporadic Meteoroids

astro-ph.EP · 2026-06-25 · unverdicted · novelty 6.0

Dynamical simulations show mm-sized meteoroids impacting Earth below 17 km/s are mostly asteroidal if released in the last 150-200 kyr, with cometary fraction rising above that speed and dominating above 27 km/s.

The Nonparametric Kiefer-Weiss Problem

math.ST · 2026-05-29 · unverdicted · novelty 6.0

The nonparametric Kiefer-Weiss problem is solved by deriving an optimal stopping policy based on a two-dimensional statistic (likelihood ratio plus expected remaining sample size) whose randomization rule maps the likelihood ratio to an integer sample size.

Pattern-based tests for two-dimensional copulas

math.ST · 2026-05-13 · unverdicted · novelty 6.0

A functional central limit theorem for pattern frequencies in 2D samples enables nonparametric goodness-of-fit, two-sample, and symmetry tests for copulas, with bootstrap critical values and parametric examples.

Scale selection for geometric medians on product manifolds

math.ST · 2026-05-08 · unverdicted · novelty 6.0

Joint location-scale minimization for geometric medians on product manifolds degenerates to marginal medians, and three new scale-selection methods restore identifiability with asymptotic guarantees.

A test for normality based on self-similarity

stat.ME · 2026-04-04 · conditional · novelty 6.0

The SSTN detects non-normality by tracking how the standardized empirical characteristic function changes under repeated self-similarity transformations, with the null distribution calibrated by Monte Carlo simulation.

citing papers explorer

Showing 1 of 1 citing paper after filters.

  • Network Inequality through Preferential Attachment, Triadic Closure, and Homophily physics.soc-ph · 2025-09-27 · unverdicted · none · ref 33

    PATCH model simulations show preferential attachment and homophily increase segregation and degree inequality while triadic closure reduces segregation but amplifies overall inequality, and the model accounts for observed gender disparities in 50 years of physics and CS collaboration networks.