CONANASTTHAug 18, 2021

Rapid evaluation of the spectral signal detection threshold and Stieltjes transform

arXiv:1904.116658 citationsh-index: 11
Originality Incremental advance
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This work provides a fast and accurate method for signal detection threshold evaluation in heteroscedastic noise models, which is a known bottleneck in statistical signal processing.

The authors introduce a rapid algorithm for evaluating the spectral signal detection threshold in large data matrices with separable variance profile noise, using nested Newton's method. They also provide a new algorithm for computing the Stieltjes transform, with proven correctness and demonstrated performance in numerical experiments.

Accurate detection of signal components is a frequently-encountered challenge in statistical applications with low signal-to-noise ratio. This problem is particularly challenging in settings with heteroscedastic noise. In certain signal-plus-noise models of data, such as the classical spiked covariance model and its variants, there are closed formulas for the spectral signal detection threshold (the largest sample eigenvalue attributable solely to noise) for isotropic noise in the limit of infinitely large data matrices. However, more general noise models currently lack provably fast and accurate methods for numerically evaluating the threshold. In this work, we introduce a rapid algorithm for evaluating the spectral signal detection threshold in the limit of infinitely large data matrices. We consider noise matrices with a separable variance profile (whose variance matrix is rank one), as these arise often in applications. The solution is based on nested applications of Newton's method. We also devise a new algorithm for evaluating the Stieltjes transform of the spectral distribution at real values exceeding the threshold. The Stieltjes transform on this domain is known to be a key quantity in parameter estimation for spectral denoising methods. The correctness of both algorithms is proven from a detailed analysis of the master equations characterizing the Stieltjes transform, and their performance is demonstrated in numerical experiments.

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