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arxiv: 1602.00542 · v4 · pith:SIKWU5EFnew · submitted 2016-02-01 · 💻 cs.IT · math.IT· math.ST· stat.ML· stat.TH

Cluster-Seeking James-Stein Estimators

classification 💻 cs.IT math.ITmath.STstat.MLstat.TH
keywords boldsymbolthetaestimatorsriskvectorml-estimatorobservedreduction
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This paper considers the problem of estimating a high-dimensional vector of parameters $\boldsymbol{\theta} \in \mathbb{R}^n$ from a noisy observation. The noise vector is i.i.d. Gaussian with known variance. For a squared-error loss function, the James-Stein (JS) estimator is known to dominate the simple maximum-likelihood (ML) estimator when the dimension $n$ exceeds two. The JS-estimator shrinks the observed vector towards the origin, and the risk reduction over the ML-estimator is greatest for $\boldsymbol{\theta}$ that lie close to the origin. JS-estimators can be generalized to shrink the data towards any target subspace. Such estimators also dominate the ML-estimator, but the risk reduction is significant only when $\boldsymbol{\theta}$ lies close to the subspace. This leads to the question: in the absence of prior information about $\boldsymbol{\theta}$, how do we design estimators that give significant risk reduction over the ML-estimator for a wide range of $\boldsymbol{\theta}$? In this paper, we propose shrinkage estimators that attempt to infer the structure of $\boldsymbol{\theta}$ from the observed data in order to construct a good attracting subspace. In particular, the components of the observed vector are separated into clusters, and the elements in each cluster shrunk towards a common attractor. The number of clusters and the attractor for each cluster are determined from the observed vector. We provide concentration results for the squared-error loss and convergence results for the risk of the proposed estimators. The results show that the estimators give significant risk reduction over the ML-estimator for a wide range of $\boldsymbol{\theta}$, particularly for large $n$. Simulation results are provided to support the theoretical claims.

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