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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Compensated transfer entropy as a tool for reliably estimating information transfer in physiological time series
Luca FaesAlberto PortaGiandomenico Nollosubject
magnetoencephalographyInformation transferinstantaneous causalityGeneral Physics and Astronomylcsh:AstrophysicsMachine learningcomputer.software_genreconditional entropyPhysics and Astronomy (all)lcsh:QB460-466False positive paradoxSensitivity (control systems)lcsh:ScienceMathematicsConditional entropytime delay embeddingSeries (mathematics)business.industryEstimatorlcsh:QC1-999Cardiovascular variability; Conditional entropy; Instantaneous causality; Magnetoencephalography; Time delay embedding; Physics and Astronomy (all)Settore ING-INF/06 - Bioingegneria Elettronica E InformaticaTransfer entropylcsh:QArtificial intelligenceMinificationcardiovascular variabilitycardiovascular variability; conditional entropy; instantaneous causality; magnetoencephalography; time delay embeddingbusinesscomputerAlgorithmlcsh:Physicsdescription
We present a framework for the estimation of transfer entropy (TE) under the conditions typical of physiological system analysis, featuring short multivariate time series and the presence of instantaneous causality (IC). The framework is based on recognizing that TE can be interpreted as the difference between two conditional entropy (CE) terms, and builds on an efficient CE estimator that compensates for the bias occurring for high dimensional conditioning vectors and follows a sequential embedding procedure whereby the conditioning vectors are formed progressively according to a criterion for CE minimization. The issue of IC is faced accounting for zero-lag interactions according to two alternative empirical strategies: if IC is deemed as physiologically meaningful, zero-lag effects are assimilated to lagged effects to make them causally relevant; if not, zero-lag effects are incorporated in both CE terms to obtain a compensation. The resulting compensated TE (cTE) estimator is tested on simulated time series, showing that its utilization improves sensitivity (from 61% to 96%) and specificity (from 5/6 to 0/6 false positives) in the detection of information transfer respectively when instantaneous effect are causally meaningful and non-meaningful. Then, it is evaluated on examples of cardiovascular and neurological time series, supporting the feasibility of the proposed framework for the investigation of physiological mechanisms. © 2013 by the authors.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2013-01-11 |