No Arabic abstract
High-dimensional statistical inference with general estimating equations are challenging and remain less explored. In this paper, we study two problems in the area: confidence set estimation for multiple components of the model parameters, and model specifications test. For the first one, we propose to construct a new set of estimating equations such that the impact from estimating the high-dimensional nuisance parameters becomes asymptotically negligible. The new construction enables us to estimate a valid confidence region by empirical likelihood ratio. For the second one, we propose a test statistic as the maximum of the marginal empirical likelihood ratios to quantify data evidence against the model specification. Our theory establishes the validity of the proposed empirical likelihood approaches, accommodating over-identification and exponentially growing data dimensionality. The numerical studies demonstrate promising performance and potential practical benefits of the new methods.
As an effective nonparametric method, empirical likelihood (EL) is appealing in combining estimating equations flexibly and adaptively for incorporating data information. To select important variables and estimating equations in the sparse high-dimensional model, we consider a penalized EL method based on robust estimating functions by applying two penalty functions for regularizing the regression parameters and the associated Lagrange multipliers simultaneously, which allows the dimensionalities of both regression parameters and estimating equations to grow exponentially with the sample size. A first inspection on the robustness of estimating equations contributing to the estimating equations selection and variable selection is discussed from both theoretical perspective and intuitive simulation results in this paper. The proposed method can improve the robustness and effectiveness when the data have underlying outliers or heavy tails in the response variables and/or covariates. The robustness of the estimator is measured via the bounded influence function, and the oracle properties are also established under some regularity conditions. Extensive simulation studies and a yeast cell data are used to evaluate the performance of the proposed method. The numerical results reveal that the robustness of sparse estimating equations selection fundamentally enhances variable selection accuracy when the data have heavy tails and/or include underlying outliers.
Nonparametric empirical Bayes methods provide a flexible and attractive approach to high-dimensional data analysis. One particularly elegant empirical Bayes methodology, involving the Kiefer-Wolfowitz nonparametric maximum likelihood estimator (NPMLE) for mixture models, has been known for decades. However, implementation and theoretical analysis of the Kiefer-Wolfowitz NPMLE are notoriously difficult. A fast algorithm was recently proposed that makes NPMLE-based procedures feasible for use in large-scale problems, but the algorithm calculates only an approximation to the NPMLE. In this paper we make two contributions. First, we provide upper bounds on the convergence rate of the approximate NPMLEs statistical error, which have the same order as the best known bounds for the true NPMLE. This suggests that the approximate NPMLE is just as effective as the true NPMLE for statistical applications. Second, we illustrate the promise of NPMLE procedures in a high-dimensional binary classification problem. We propose a new procedure and show that it vastly outperforms existing methods in experiments with simulated data. In real data analyses involving cancer survival and gene expression data, we show that it is very competitive with several recently proposed methods for regularized linear discriminant analysis, another popular approach to high-dimensional classification.
Linear mixed-effects models are widely used in analyzing clustered or repeated measures data. We propose a quasi-likelihood approach for estimation and inference of the unknown parameters in linear mixed-effects models with high-dimensional fixed effects. The proposed method is applicable to general settings where the dimension of the random effects and the cluster sizes are possibly large. Regarding the fixed effects, we provide rate optimal estimators and valid inference procedures that do not rely on the structural information of the variance components. We also study the estimation of variance components with high-dimensional fixed effects in general settings. The algorithms are easy to implement and computationally fast. The proposed methods are assessed in various simulation settings and are applied to a real study regarding the associations between body mass index and genetic polymorphic markers in a heterogeneous stock mice population.
The celebrated Bernstein von-Mises theorem ensures that credible regions from Bayesian posterior are well-calibrated when the model is correctly-specified, in the frequentist sense that their coverage probabilities tend to the nominal values as data accrue. However, this conventional Bayesian framework is known to lack robustness when the model is misspecified or only partly specified, such as in quantile regression, risk minimization based supervised/unsupervised learning and robust estimation. To overcome this difficulty, we propose a new Bayesian inferential approach that substitutes the (misspecified or partly specified) likelihoods with proper exponentially tilted empirical likelihoods plus a regularization term. Our surrogate empirical likelihood is carefully constructed by using the first order optimality condition of the empirical risk minimization as the moment condition. We show that the Bayesian posterior obtained by combining this surrogate empirical likelihood and the prior is asymptotically close to a normal distribution centering at the empirical risk minimizer with covariance matrix taking an appropriate sandwiched form. Consequently, the resulting Bayesian credible regions are automatically calibrated to deliver valid uncertainty quantification. Computationally, the proposed method can be easily implemented by Markov Chain Monte Carlo sampling algorithms. Our numerical results show that the proposed method tends to be more accurate than existing state-of-the-art competitors.
In the context of a high-dimensional linear regression model, we propose the use of an empirical correlation-adaptive prior that makes use of information in the observed predictor variable matrix to adaptively address high collinearity, determining if parameters associated with correlated predictors should be shrunk together or kept apart. Under suitable conditions, we prove that this empirical Bayes posterior concentrates around the true sparse parameter at the optimal rate asymptotically. A simplified version of a shotgun stochastic search algorithm is employed to implement the variable selection procedure, and we show, via simulation experiments across different settings and a real-data application, the favorable performance of the proposed method compared to existing methods.