The concept of spectral relative entropy rate is introduced for jointly stationary Gaussian processes. Using classical information-theoretic results, we establish a remarkable connection between time and spectral domain relative entropy rates. This naturally leads to a new spectral estimation technique where a multivariate version of the Itakura–Saito distance is employed. It may be viewed as an extension of the approach, called THREE, introduced by Byrnes, Georgiou, and Lindquist in 2000 which, in turn, followed in the footsteps of the Burg–Jaynes Maximum Entropy Method. Spectral estimation is here recast in the form of a constrained spectrum approximation problem where the distance is equal to the processes relative entropy rate. The corresponding solution entails a complexity upper bound which improves on the one so far available in the multichannel framework. Indeed, it is equal to the one featured by THREE in the scalar case. The solution is computed via a globally convergent matricial Newton-type algorithm. Simulations suggest the effectiveness of the new technique in tackling multivariate spectral estimation tasks, especially in the case of short data records.

Time and spectral domain relative entropy: A new approach to multivariate spectral estimation

FERRANTE, AUGUSTO;MASIERO, CHIARA;PAVON, MICHELE
2012

Abstract

The concept of spectral relative entropy rate is introduced for jointly stationary Gaussian processes. Using classical information-theoretic results, we establish a remarkable connection between time and spectral domain relative entropy rates. This naturally leads to a new spectral estimation technique where a multivariate version of the Itakura–Saito distance is employed. It may be viewed as an extension of the approach, called THREE, introduced by Byrnes, Georgiou, and Lindquist in 2000 which, in turn, followed in the footsteps of the Burg–Jaynes Maximum Entropy Method. Spectral estimation is here recast in the form of a constrained spectrum approximation problem where the distance is equal to the processes relative entropy rate. The corresponding solution entails a complexity upper bound which improves on the one so far available in the multichannel framework. Indeed, it is equal to the one featured by THREE in the scalar case. The solution is computed via a globally convergent matricial Newton-type algorithm. Simulations suggest the effectiveness of the new technique in tackling multivariate spectral estimation tasks, especially in the case of short data records.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/2478596
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