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In this paper we develop a nonparametric maximum likelihood estimate of the mixing distribution of the parameters of a linear stochastic dynamical system. This includes, for example, pharmacokinetic population models with process and measurement noise that are linear in the state vector, input vector and the process and measurement noise vectors. Most research in mixing distributions only considers measurement noise. The advantages of the models with process noise are that, in addition to the measurements errors, the uncertainties in the model itself are taken into the account. For example, for deterministic pharmacokinetic models, errors in dose amounts, administration times, and timing of blood samples are typically not included. For linear stochastic models, we use linear Kalman-Bucy filtering to calculate the likelihood of the observations and then employ a nonparametric adaptive grid algorithm to find the nonparametric maximum likelihood estimate of the mixing distribution. We then use the directional derivatives of the estimated mixing distribution to show that the result found attains a global maximum. A simple example using a one compartment pharmacokinetic linear stochastic model is given. In addition to population pharmacokinetics, this research also applies to empirical Bayes estimation.
In this paper, we consider modeling missing dynamics with a nonparametric non-Markovian model, constructed using the theory of kernel embedding of conditional distributions on appropriate Reproducing Kernel Hilbert Spaces (RKHS), equipped with orthon
Inference on unknown quantities in dynamical systems via observational data is essential for providing meaningful insight, furnishing accurate predictions, enabling robust control, and establishing appropriate designs for future experiments. Merging
We consider a dynamical system with two sources of uncertainties: (1) parameterized input with a known probability distribution and (2) stochastic input-to-response (ItR) function with heteroscedastic randomness. Our purpose is to efficiently quantif
A nonparametric Bayes approach is proposed for the problem of estimating a sparse sequence based on Gaussian random variables. We adopt the popular two-group prior with one component being a point mass at zero, and the other component being a mixture
Mutual information is a well-known tool to measure the mutual dependence between variables. In this paper, a Bayesian nonparametric estimation of mutual information is established by means of the Dirichlet process and the $k$-nearest neighbor distanc