Is It a Computing Algorithm or a Statistical Procedure –Can You Tell or Should You Care?

Time

-

Locations

Rettaliata Engineering Center, Room 124

Host

Department of Applied Mathematics

Speaker

Xiao-Li Meng
Department of Statistics, Harvard University
https://statistics.fas.harvard.edu/people/xiao-li-meng



Description

For years, it irritated me whenever someone calling the EM (expectation-maximization) algorithm an estimation procedure. I’d argue passionately that EM merely is an algorithm designed to compute a maximum likelihood estimator (MLE). Therefore the estimation principle/procedure is MLE, not EM, and it is dangerous to mix the two, for example by introducing modifications to EM steps without understanding how they would alter MLE as a statistical procedure. The reality, however, is that the line between computing algorithms and statistical procedures is becoming increasingly blurred. As a matter of the fact, practitioners are now typically given a black box, which turns data into an “answer.” Is such a black box a computing algorithm or a statistical procedure? Does it matter that we know which is which? This talk reports my contemplations of these questions that originated in my taking part in a project that investigates the self-consistency principle introduced by Efron (1967). We will start with a simple regression problem to illustrate a self-consistency method, and the audience will be invited to contemplate whether it is a magical computing algorithm or a powerful statistical procedure. We will then discuss how such contemplations have played critical roles in developing the self-consistency principle into a full-bloom generalization of EM for semi/non-parametric estimation with incomplete data and under an arbitrary loss function, capable of addressing wavelets de-noising with irregularly spaced data as well as variable selection via LASSO-type of methods with incomplete data. Throughout the talk, the audience will also be invited to consider a widely open problem: how to formulate in general the trade-off between statistical efficiency and computational efficiency? (This talk is based on joint work with Thomas Lee and Zhan Li.)

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