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ALT
2002
Springer

How to Achieve Minimax Expected Kullback-Leibler Distance from an Unknown Finite Distribution

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How to Achieve Minimax Expected Kullback-Leibler Distance from an Unknown Finite Distribution
Abstract. We consider a problem that is related to the “Universal Encoding Problem” from information theory. The basic goal is to find rules that map “partial information” about a distribution X over an m-letter alphabet into a guess X for X such that the Kullback-Leibler divergence between X and X is as small as possible. The cost associated with a rule is the maximal expected Kullback-Leibler divergence between X and X. First, we show that the cost associated with the well-known add-one rule equals ln(1 + (m − 1)/(n + 1)) thereby extending a result of Forster and Warmuth [3, 2] to m ≥ 3. Second, we derive an absolute (as opposed to asymptotic) lower bound on the smallest possible cost. Technically, this is done by determining (almost exactly) the Bayes error of the add-one rule with a uniform prior (where the asymptotics for n → ∞ was known before). Third, we hint to tools from approximation theory and support the conjecture that there exists a rule whose cost asympt...
Dietrich Braess, Jürgen Forster, Tomas Sauer,
Added 15 Mar 2010
Updated 15 Mar 2010
Type Conference
Year 2002
Where ALT
Authors Dietrich Braess, Jürgen Forster, Tomas Sauer, Hans-Ulrich Simon
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