6533b86efe1ef96bd12cbe9e
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Asymptotic optimality of myopic information-based strategies for Bayesian adaptive estimation
Janne V. Kujalasubject
Statistics and ProbabilityAsymptotic analysisMathematical optimizationPosterior probabilityBayesian probabilityMathematics - Statistics TheoryStatistics Theory (math.ST)050105 experimental psychologydifferential entropyDifferential entropyactive data selection03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineactive learningFOS: Mathematics0501 psychology and cognitive sciencescost of observationdecision theoryMathematicsD-optimalityBayes estimatorSequential estimation05 social sciencesBayesian adaptive estimationAsymptotically optimal algorithmConvergence of random variablesasymptotic optimalitysequential estimation030217 neurology & neurosurgerydescription
This paper presents a general asymptotic theory of sequential Bayesian estimation giving results for the strongest, almost sure convergence. We show that under certain smoothness conditions on the probability model, the greedy information gain maximization algorithm for adaptive Bayesian estimation is asymptotically optimal in the sense that the determinant of the posterior covariance in a certain neighborhood of the true parameter value is asymptotically minimal. Using this result, we also obtain an asymptotic expression for the posterior entropy based on a novel definition of almost sure convergence on "most trials" (meaning that the convergence holds on a fraction of trials that converges to one). Then, we extend the results to a recently published framework, which generalizes the usual adaptive estimation setting by allowing different trial placements to be associated with different, random costs of observation. For this setting, the author has proposed the heuristic of maximizing the expected information gain divided by the expected cost of that placement. In this paper, we show that this myopic strategy satisfies an analogous asymptotic optimality result when the convergence of the posterior distribution is considered as a function of the total cost (as opposed to the number of observations).
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-02-01 |