BookmarkSubscribeRSS Feed
☑ This topic is solved. Need further help from the community? Please sign in and ask a new question.
johanihanan
Calcite | Level 5

I have issue with interpreting the results of residual autocorrelation  for ARIMA model.  The plot of lag versus White Noise Prob is empty! seems the values are very small. The p value is 0.003.  Based on P value , the null hypothesis of no autocorrelation in the residual is rejected at 5%. that means there are strong correlation BUT the plot shows small autocorrelation values!

I hope someone help me on that 

thank you

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
sbxkoenk
SAS Super FREQ

Hello,

 

Can you specify which two plots you are talking about?

Is it:

  • RESIDUAL(WN) --> produces the plot of Ljung-Box white-noise test p-values at different lags.
  • RESIDUAL(ACF) --> produces the plot of residual autocorrelations.

Or maybe you have just asked for
RESIDUAL(CORR)?

 

What is small?
Small autocorrelation values can also be significantly different from zero of course.

 

BR, Koen

View solution in original post

3 REPLIES 3
Ksharp
Super User
White Noise is special term in time series analysis. So post it at forecast forum would be better.

https://communities.sas.com/t5/SAS-Forecasting-and-Econometrics/bd-p/forecasting_econometrics
Ksharp
Super User
Also could check PROC AUTOREG in Rick's blog:

https://blogs.sas.com/content/iml/2015/03/12/digits-of-pi.html
sbxkoenk
SAS Super FREQ

Hello,

 

Can you specify which two plots you are talking about?

Is it:

  • RESIDUAL(WN) --> produces the plot of Ljung-Box white-noise test p-values at different lags.
  • RESIDUAL(ACF) --> produces the plot of residual autocorrelations.

Or maybe you have just asked for
RESIDUAL(CORR)?

 

What is small?
Small autocorrelation values can also be significantly different from zero of course.

 

BR, Koen

sas-innovate-wordmark-2025-midnight.png

Register Today!

Join us for SAS Innovate 2025, our biggest and most exciting global event of the year, in Orlando, FL, from May 6-9. Sign up by March 14 for just $795.


Register now!

What is ANOVA?

ANOVA, or Analysis Of Variance, is used to compare the averages or means of two or more populations to better understand how they differ. Watch this tutorial for more.

Find more tutorials on the SAS Users YouTube channel.

Discussion stats
  • 3 replies
  • 916 views
  • 0 likes
  • 3 in conversation