6533b871fe1ef96bd12d1bb6
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Estimating the decomposition of predictive information in multivariate systems
Giandomenico NolloLuca FaesDaniele MarinazzoDimitris KugiumtzisFabrice Jurystasubject
Statistics and ProbabilityComputer scienceEntropyTRANSFER ENTROPYStochastic ProcesseInformation Storage and RetrievalheartAPPROXIMATE ENTROPYMaximum entropy spectral estimationInformation theoryGRANGER CAUSALITYJoint entropyNonlinear DynamicMECHANISMSBinary entropy functionTheoreticalHeart RateModelsInformationSLEEP EEGStatisticsOSCILLATIONSTOOLEntropy (information theory)Multivariate AnalysiElectroencephalography; Entropy; Heart Rate; Information Storage and Retrieval; Linear Models; Nonlinear Dynamics; Sleep; Stochastic Processes; Models Theoretical; Multivariate AnalysisConditional entropyStochastic ProcessesHEART-RATE-VARIABILITYCOMPLEXITYConditional mutual informationBrainElectroencephalographyModels TheoreticalScience GeneralCondensed Matter PhysicscardiorespiratoryNonlinear DynamicsPHYSIOLOGICAL TIME-SERIESSettore ING-INF/06 - Bioingegneria Elettronica E InformaticaMultivariate AnalysisLinear ModelsLinear ModelTransfer entropySleepAlgorithmStatistical and Nonlinear Physicdescription
In the study of complex systems from observed multivariate time series, insight into the evolution of one system may be under investigation, which can be explained by the information storage of the system and the information transfer from other interacting systems. We present a framework for the model-free estimation of information storage and information transfer computed as the terms composing the predictive information about the target of a multivariate dynamical process. The approach tackles the curse of dimensionality employing a nonuniform embedding scheme that selects progressively, among the past components of the multivariate process, only those that contribute most, in terms of conditional mutual information, to the present target process. Moreover, it computes all information-theoretic quantities using a nearest-neighbor technique designed to compensate the bias due to the different dimensionality of individual entropy terms. The resulting estimators of prediction entropy, storage entropy, transfer entropy, and partial transfer entropy are tested on simulations of coupled linear stochastic and nonlinear deterministic dynamic processes, demonstrating the superiority of the proposed approach over the traditional estimators based on uniform embedding. The framework is then applied to multivariate physiologic time series, resulting in physiologically well-interpretable information decompositions of cardiovascular and cardiorespiratory interactions during head-up tilt and of joint brain-heart dynamics during sleep.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-01-01 |