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Learning poisson binomial distributions

Conference Paper Session 8B Algorithms and Complexity · Theoretical Computer Science

Abstract

We consider a basic problem in unsupervised learning: learning an unknown Poisson Binomial Distribution . A Poisson Binomial Distribution (PBD) over {0,1,...,n} is the distribution of a sum of n independent Bernoulli random variables which may have arbitrary, potentially non-equal, expectations. These distributions were first studied by S. Poisson in 1837 and are a natural n-parameter generalization of the familiar Binomial Distribution. Surprisingly, prior to our work this basic learning problem was poorly understood, and known results for it were far from optimal. We essentially settle the complexity of the learning problem for this basic class of distributions. As our main result we give a highly efficient algorithm which learns to ε-accuracy using O(1/ε 3 ) samples independent of n . The running time of the algorithm is quasilinear in the size of its input data, i.e. ~O(log(n)/ε 3 ) bit-operations (observe that each draw from the distribution is a log(n)-bit string). This is nearly optimal since any algorithm must use Ω(1/ε 2 ) samples. We also give positive and negative results for some extensions of this learning problem.

Authors

Keywords

  • applied probability
  • computational learning theory
  • learning distributions

Context

Venue
ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing
Archive span
1969-2025
Indexed papers
4364
Paper id
178147034876555272