4.7 Article

Information estimation using nonparametric copulas

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW E
Volume 98, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.98.053302

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Burroughs-Wellcome Fund Career Award at the Scientific Interface
  2. New York Stem Cell Foundation
  3. NIH grants from the NIMH BRAINS program [R01 MH107620]
  4. NINDS [R01 NS089521]
  5. BRAIN Initiative [R01 NS108410, U19 NS107464]
  6. Fondation Bertarelli

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Estimation of mutual information between random variables has become crucial in a range of fields, from physics to neuroscience to finance. Estimating information accurately over a wide range of conditions relies on the development of flexible methods to describe statistical dependencies among variables, without imposing potentially invalid assumptions on the data. Such methods are needed in cases that lack prior knowledge of their statistical properties and that have limited sample numbers. Here we propose a powerful and generally applicable information estimator based on nonparametric copulas. This estimator, called the nonparametric copula-based estimator (NPC), is tailored to take into account detailed stochastic relationships in the data independently of the data's marginal distributions. The NPC estimator can be used both for continuous and discrete numerical variables and thus provides a single framework for the mutual information estimation of both continuous and discrete data. By extensive validation on artificial samples drawn from various statistical distributions, we found that the NPC estimator compares well against commonly used alternatives. Unlike methods not based on copulas, it allows an estimation of information that is robust to changes of the details of the marginal distributions. Unlike parametric copula methods, it remains accurate regardless of the precise form of the interactions between the variables. In addition, the NPC estimator had accurate information estimates even at low sample numbers, in comparison to alternative estimators. The NPC estimator therefore provides a good balance between general applicability to arbitrarily shaped statistical dependencies in the data and shows accurate and robust performance when working with small sample sizes. We anticipate that the nonparametric copula information estimator will be a powerful tool in estimating mutual information in a broad range of data.

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