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Suppose you have $X_1,\ldots,X_{20}$ $f(x|\theta) = 0.1(1+\theta x)$ for $-1, $-1<\theta<1$. How would you find the moment estimator of $\theta$?

Attempt: Isn't the moment estimator of theta just the first moment which is the mean?

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    You'll need $0.5$ rather than $0.1$ as your normalizing constant. The integral of the density needs to be $1$.2011-11-16

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$ \int_{-1}^1 1+\theta x\;dx = 2, $ so you need $f(x|\theta) = \frac 12 (1+\theta x)$.

If you mean what I think you mean, I would call it a method-of-moments estimator of $\theta$ rather than a "moment estimator", since the latter term might be mistaken for "estimator of the moment(s)".

The first moment of this distribution is $ \int_{-1}^1 x f(x \mid \theta) \; dx, $ which by my reckoning is $\theta/3$. The first moment of the sample is $(X_1+\cdots+X_{20})/20$. You need to equate the first moment of the distribution with the first moment of the sample and then solve for $\theta$.

The method-of-moments estimator of $\theta$ would be equal to the sample mean only if $\theta$ were the population mean.

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    @lord12 It would be 3 times the sample mean. Consistency does involve a limit as the sample size approaches $\infty$, but just what you take the limit of is something you need to be careful about. You need to show that no matter how small the positive number $\varepsilon$ is, the probability that the estimator differs from $\theta$ by more than $\varepsilon$ approaches $0$ as the sample size approaches $\infty$.2011-11-18