Density Deconvolution With EPI Splines

Abstract

Analysts tasked with developing probability density estimates may obtain data in sets of varying quality and quantity. Often low fidelity data contaminated with measurement error, or noise, may be abundant, but the cost of obtaining data free of these errors will limit the amount of high-fidelity data available. In such a scenario, the problem is to identify an estimate of a probability density function given scarce high-fidelity observations, knowledge of measurement errors, abundant noisy data, and available user knowledge of the density apart from empirical data. We solve this rich class of deconvolution problems through constrained optimization with first-order epi-splines, which are used for the first time to approximate densities to an arbitrarily high level of precision. We limit our scope to univariate densities where measurement errors are homoscedastic. Demonstrations come from a benchmark from the literature, historical medical data, and a scenario in uncertainty quantification in fluid dynamics. Results show that deconvolution via epi-splines is viable, comparable with a widely available deconvolution method, and shows potential for savings in resource budgets for data collection.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Sep 01, 2015
Accession Number
AD1008886

Entities

People

  • James C. Carbaugh

Organizations

  • Naval Postgraduate School

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Accuracy
  • Algorithms
  • Applied Mathematics
  • Computational Science
  • Computations
  • Data Science
  • Fluid Dynamics
  • Information Science
  • Mathematics
  • Measurement
  • Operations Research
  • Probability
  • Probability Density Functions
  • Random Variables
  • Reliability
  • Signal Processing
  • Statistics

Readers

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  • Statistical inference.