MELGSTMLDec 20, 2022

Uncertainty Quantification of MLE for Entity Ranking with Covariates

arXiv:2212.09961v221 citationsh-index: 110
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses ranking problems with covariates, a more realistic but understudied setting, though it is incremental as it builds on existing BTL models.

The paper tackles the problem of statistical estimation and inference for ranking with pairwise comparisons and covariate information by proposing the CARE model, which extends the BTL model to incorporate covariates, and derives optimal rates and asymptotic distributions for the MLE, validated through numerical studies and an application to mutual fund data.

This paper concerns with statistical estimation and inference for the ranking problems based on pairwise comparisons with additional covariate information such as the attributes of the compared items. Despite extensive studies, few prior literatures investigate this problem under the more realistic setting where covariate information exists. To tackle this issue, we propose a novel model, Covariate-Assisted Ranking Estimation (CARE) model, that extends the well-known Bradley-Terry-Luce (BTL) model, by incorporating the covariate information. Specifically, instead of assuming every compared item has a fixed latent score $\{θ_i^*\}_{i=1}^n$, we assume the underlying scores are given by $\{α_i^*+{x}_i^\topβ^*\}_{i=1}^n$, where $α_i^*$ and ${x}_i^\topβ^*$ represent latent baseline and covariate score of the $i$-th item, respectively. We impose natural identifiability conditions and derive the $\ell_{\infty}$- and $\ell_2$-optimal rates for the maximum likelihood estimator of $\{α_i^*\}_{i=1}^{n}$ and $β^*$ under a sparse comparison graph, using a novel `leave-one-out' technique (Chen et al., 2019) . To conduct statistical inferences, we further derive asymptotic distributions for the MLE of $\{α_i^*\}_{i=1}^n$ and $β^*$ with minimal sample complexity. This allows us to answer the question whether some covariates have any explanation power for latent scores and to threshold some sparse parameters to improve the ranking performance. We improve the approximation method used in (Gao et al., 2021) for the BLT model and generalize it to the CARE model. Moreover, we validate our theoretical results through large-scale numerical studies and an application to the mutual fund stock holding dataset.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes