LGNASTMEMLJul 28, 2025

Diagonally-Weighted Generalized Method of Moments Estimation for Gaussian Mixture Modeling

arXiv:2507.20459v1h-index: 7Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
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This work addresses computational bottlenecks in high-dimensional Gaussian mixture modeling, offering a more practical solution for researchers and practitioners dealing with such data.

The authors tackled the computational inefficiency of moment-based estimation methods for Gaussian mixture models by proposing a diagonally-weighted generalized method of moments (DGMM), which achieved smaller estimation errors and substantially shorter runtime compared to existing methods in numerical studies.

Since Pearson [Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. A, 185 (1894), pp. 71-110] first applied the method of moments (MM) for modeling data as a mixture of one-dimensional Gaussians, moment-based estimation methods have proliferated. Among these methods, the generalized method of moments (GMM) improves the statistical efficiency of MM by weighting the moments appropriately. However, the computational complexity and storage complexity of MM and GMM grow exponentially with the dimension, making these methods impractical for high-dimensional data or when higher-order moments are required. Such computational bottlenecks are more severe in GMM since it additionally requires estimating a large weighting matrix. To overcome these bottlenecks, we propose the diagonally-weighted GMM (DGMM), which achieves a balance among statistical efficiency, computational complexity, and numerical stability. We apply DGMM to study the parameter estimation problem for weakly separated heteroscedastic low-rank Gaussian mixtures and design a computationally efficient and numerically stable algorithm that obtains the DGMM estimator without explicitly computing or storing the moment tensors. We implement the proposed algorithm and empirically validate the advantages of DGMM: in numerical studies, DGMM attains smaller estimation errors while requiring substantially shorter runtime than MM and GMM. The code and data will be available upon publication at https://github.com/liu-lzhang/dgmm.

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