Statistics Seminar Series - Cecile Durot (Université Paris Nanterre) | Dipartimento di Scienze Economiche

Statistics Seminar Series - Cecile Durot (Université Paris Nanterre)

2 October 2024 12:30 to 13:30
Luogo: 
Aula 22 (Caniana) e Google Meet
Relatore/i: 
Cecile Durot (Université Paris Nanterre)
Seminari di dipartimento
Persona di riferimento: 
prof. Tommaso Lando, tommaso.lando@unibg.it
Strutture interne organizzatrici: 
Dipartimento di Scienze Economiche
Title:
Minimax Optimal rates of convergence in the shuffled regression, unlinked regression, and deconvolution under vanishing noise
 
Co-author:
Debarghya Mukherjee
 
Abstract:
Shuffled regression and unlinked regression represent intriguing challenges that have garnered considerable attention in many fields, including but not limited to ecological regression, multi-target tracking problems, image denoising, etc. However, a notable gap exists in the existing literature, particularly in vanishing noise, i.e., how the rate of estimation of the underlying signal scales with the error variance. This paper aims to bridge this gap by delving into the monotone function estimation problem under vanishing noise variance, i.e., we allow the error variance to go to $0$ as the number of observations increases. Our investigation reveals that, asymptotically, the shuffled regression problem exhibits a comparatively simpler nature than the unlinked regression; if the error variance is smaller than a threshold, then the minimax risk of the shuffled regression is smaller than that of the unlinked regression. On the other hand, the minimax estimation error is of the same order in the two problems if the noise level is larger than that threshold. Our analysis is quite general in that we do not assume any smoothness of the underlying monotone link function. Because these problems are related to deconvolution, we also provide bounds for deconvolution in a similar context. Through this exploration, we contribute to understanding the intricate relationships between these statistical problems and shed light on their behaviors when subjected to the nuanced constraint of vanishing noise.