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Testing Support Size More Efficiently Than Learning Histograms

Conference Paper 6D Algorithms and Complexity · Theoretical Computer Science

Abstract

Consider two problems about an unknown probability distribution p : (1) How many samples from p are required to test if p is supported on n elements or not? Specifically, given samples from p , determine whether it is supported on at most n elements, or it is ”є-far” (in total variation distance) from being supported on n elements. (2) Given m samples from p , what is the largest lower bound on its support size that we can produce? The best known upper bound for problem (1) uses a general algorithm for learning the histogram of the distribution p , which requires Θ( n /є 2 log n ) samples. We show that testing can be done more efficiently than learning the histogram, using only O ( n /є log n log(1/є)) samples, nearly matching the best known lower bound of Ω( n /є log n ). This algorithm also provides a better solution to problem (2), producing larger lower bounds on support size than what follows from previous work. The proof relies on an analysis of Chebyshev polynomial approximations outside the range where they are designed to be good approximations.

Authors

Keywords

  • Chebyshev polynomials
  • distribution testing
  • property testing
  • support size

Context

Venue
ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing
Archive span
1969-2025
Indexed papers
4364
Paper id
407869997361925546