STLGOct 15, 2025

Optimal Bounds for Tyler's M-Estimator for Elliptical Distributions

arXiv:2510.13751v1h-index: 22
Originality Highly original
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This provides foundational improvements in statistical estimation for Elliptical distributions, impacting robust covariance estimation in fields like finance and signal processing.

The paper tackles the problem of estimating the shape matrix of Elliptical distributions, closing a gap by proving optimal sample threshold and error bounds for Tyler's M-estimator that fully match the Gaussian result, with rigorous convergence analysis at this threshold.

A fundamental problem in statistics is estimating the shape matrix of an Elliptical distribution. This generalizes the familiar problem of Gaussian covariance estimation, for which the sample covariance achieves optimal estimation error. For Elliptical distributions, Tyler proposed a natural M-estimator and showed strong statistical properties in the asymptotic regime, independent of the underlying distribution. Numerical experiments show that this estimator performs very well, and that Tyler's iterative procedure converges quickly to the estimator. Franks and Moitra recently provided the first distribution-free error bounds in the finite sample setting, as well as the first rigorous convergence analysis of Tyler's iterative procedure. However, their results exceed the sample complexity of the Gaussian setting by a $\log^{2} d$ factor. We close this gap by proving optimal sample threshold and error bounds for Tyler's M-estimator for all Elliptical distributions, fully matching the Gaussian result. Moreover, we recover the algorithmic convergence even at this lower sample threshold. Our approach builds on the operator scaling connection of Franks and Moitra by introducing a novel pseudorandom condition, which we call $\infty$-expansion. We show that Elliptical distributions satisfy $\infty$-expansion at the optimal sample threshold, and then prove a novel scaling result for inputs satisfying this condition.

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