Extremes and gaps in sampling from a GEM random discrete distribution
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We show that in a sample of size $n$ from a GEM$(0,\theta)$ random discrete distribution, the gaps $G_{i:n}:= X_{n-i+1:n} - X_{n-i:n}$ between order statistics $X_{1:n} \le \cdots \le X_{n:n}$ of the sample, with the convention $G_{n:n} := X_{1:n} - 1$, are distributed like the first $n$ terms of an infinite sequence of independent geometric$(i/(i+\theta))$ variables $G_i$. This extends a known result for the minimum $X_{1:n}$ to other gaps in the range of the sample, and implies that the maximum $X_{n:n}$ has the distribution of $1 + \sum_{i=1}^n G_i$, hence the known result that $X_{n:n}$ grows like $\theta\log(n)$ as $n\to\infty$, with an asymptotically normal distribution. Other consequences include most known formulas for the exact distributions of GEM$(0,\theta)$ sampling statistics, including the Ewens and Donnelly--Tavar\'e sampling formulas. For the two-parameter GEM$(\alpha,\theta)$ distribution we show that the maximal value grows like a random multiple of $n^{\alpha/(1-\alpha)}$ and find the limit distribution of the multiplier.
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