Stein's method is a general method in probability theory to obtain bounds on the distance between two probability distributions with respect to a probability metric. It was introduced by Charles Stein, who first published it in 1972,[1] to obtain a bound between the distribution of a sum of -dependent sequence of random variables and a standard normal distribution in the Kolmogorov (uniform) metric and hence to prove not only a central limit theorem, but also bounds on the rates of convergence for the given metric.

History

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At the end of the 1960s, unsatisfied with the by-then known proofs of a specific central limit theorem, Charles Stein developed a new way of proving the theorem for his statistics lecture.[2] His seminal paper was presented in 1970 at the sixth Berkeley Symposium and published in the corresponding proceedings.[1]

Later, his Ph.D. student Louis Chen Hsiao Yun modified the method so as to obtain approximation results for the Poisson distribution;[3] therefore the Stein method applied to the problem of Poisson approximation is often referred to as the Stein–Chen method.

Probably the most important contributions are the monograph by Stein (1986), where he presents his view of the method and the concept of auxiliary randomisation, in particular using exchangeable pairs, and the articles by Barbour (1988) and Götze (1991), who introduced the so-called generator interpretation, which made it possible to easily adapt the method to many other probability distributions. An important contribution was also an article by Bolthausen (1984) on the so-called combinatorial central limit theorem.[citation needed]

In the 1990s the method was adapted to a variety of distributions, such as Gaussian processes by Barbour (1990), the binomial distribution by Ehm (1991), Poisson processes by Barbour and Brown (1992), the Gamma distribution by Luk (1994), and many others.

The method gained further popularity in the machine learning community in the mid 2010s, following the development of computable Stein discrepancies and the diverse applications and algorithms based on them.

The basic approach

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Probability metrics

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Stein's method is a way to bound the distance between two probability distributions using a specific probability metric.

Let the metric be given in the form

 

Here,   and   are probability measures on a measurable space  ,   and   are random variables with distribution   and   respectively,   is the usual expectation operator and   is a set of functions from   to the set of real numbers. Set   has to be large enough, so that the above definition indeed yields a metric.

Important examples are the total variation metric, where we let   consist of all the indicator functions of measurable sets, the Kolmogorov (uniform) metric for probability measures on the real numbers, where we consider all the half-line indicator functions, and the Lipschitz (first order Wasserstein; Kantorovich) metric, where the underlying space is itself a metric space and we take the set   to be all Lipschitz-continuous functions with Lipschitz-constant 1. However, note that not every metric can be represented in the form (1.1).

In what follows   is a complicated distribution (e.g., the distribution of a sum of dependent random variables), which we want to approximate by a much simpler and tractable distribution   (e.g., the standard normal distribution).

The Stein operator

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We assume now that the distribution   is a fixed distribution; in what follows we shall in particular consider the case where   is the standard normal distribution, which serves as a classical example.

First of all, we need an operator  , which acts on functions   from   to the set of real numbers and 'characterizes' distribution   in the sense that the following equivalence holds:

 

We call such an operator the Stein operator.

For the standard normal distribution, Stein's lemma yields such an operator:

 

Thus, we can take

 

There are in general infinitely many such operators and it still remains an open question, which one to choose. However, it seems that for many distributions there is a particular good one, like (2.3) for the normal distribution.

There are different ways to find Stein operators.[4]

The Stein equation

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  is close to   with respect to   if the difference of expectations in (1.1) is close to 0. We hope now that the operator   exhibits the same behavior: if   then  , and hopefully if   we have  .

It is usually possible to define a function   such that

 

We call (3.1) the Stein equation. Replacing   by   and taking expectation with respect to  , we get

 

Now all the effort is worthwhile only if the left-hand side of (3.2) is easier to bound than the right hand side. This is, surprisingly, often the case.

If   is the standard normal distribution and we use (2.3), then the corresponding Stein equation is

 

If probability distribution Q has an absolutely continuous (with respect to the Lebesgue measure) density q, then[4]

 

Solving the Stein equation

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Analytic methods. Equation (3.3) can be easily solved explicitly:

 

Generator method. If   is the generator of a Markov process   (see Barbour (1988), Götze (1991)), then the solution to (3.2) is

 

where   denotes expectation with respect to the process   being started in  . However, one still has to prove that the solution (4.2) exists for all desired functions  .

Properties of the solution to the Stein equation

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Usually, one tries to give bounds on   and its derivatives (or differences) in terms of   and its derivatives (or differences), that is, inequalities of the form

 

for some specific   (typically   or  , respectively, depending on the form of the Stein operator), where often   is the supremum norm. Here,   denotes the differential operator, but in discrete settings it usually refers to a difference operator. The constants   may contain the parameters of the distribution  . If there are any, they are often referred to as Stein factors.

In the case of (4.1) one can prove for the supremum norm that

 

where the last bound is of course only applicable if   is differentiable (or at least Lipschitz-continuous, which, for example, is not the case if we regard the total variation metric or the Kolmogorov metric!). As the standard normal distribution has no extra parameters, in this specific case the constants are free of additional parameters.

If we have bounds in the general form (5.1), we usually are able to treat many probability metrics together. One can often start with the next step below, if bounds of the form (5.1) are already available (which is the case for many distributions).

An abstract approximation theorem

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We are now in a position to bound the left hand side of (3.1). As this step heavily depends on the form of the Stein operator, we directly regard the case of the standard normal distribution.

At this point we could directly plug in random variable  , which we want to approximate, and try to find upper bounds. However, it is often fruitful to formulate a more general theorem. Consider here the case of local dependence.

Assume that   is a sum of random variables such that the   and variance  . Assume that, for every  , there is a set  , such that   is independent of all the random variables   with  . We call this set the 'neighborhood' of  . Likewise let   be a set such that all   with   are independent of all  ,  . We can think of   as the neighbors in the neighborhood of  , a second-order neighborhood, so to speak. For a set   define now the sum  .

Using Taylor expansion, it is possible to prove that

 

Note that, if we follow this line of argument, we can bound (1.1) only for functions where   is bounded because of the third inequality of (5.2) (and in fact, if   has discontinuities, so will  ). To obtain a bound similar to (6.1) which contains only the expressions   and  , the argument is much more involved and the result is not as simple as (6.1); however, it can be done.

Theorem A. If   is as described above, we have for the Lipschitz metric   that

 

Proof. Recall that the Lipschitz metric is of the form (1.1) where the functions   are Lipschitz-continuous with Lipschitz-constant 1, thus  . Combining this with (6.1) and the last bound in (5.2) proves the theorem.

Thus, roughly speaking, we have proved that, to calculate the Lipschitz-distance between a   with local dependence structure and a standard normal distribution, we only need to know the third moments of   and the size of the neighborhoods   and  .

Application of the theorem

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We can treat the case of sums of independent and identically distributed random variables with Theorem A.

Assume that  ,   and  . We can take  . From Theorem A we obtain that

 

For sums of random variables another approach related to Steins Method is known as the zero bias transform.

Connections to other methods

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  • Lindeberg's device. Lindeberg (1922) introduced a device, where the difference   is represented as a sum of step-by-step differences.
  • Tikhomirov's method. Clearly the approach via (1.1) and (3.1) does not involve characteristic functions. However, Tikhomirov (1980) presented a proof of a central limit theorem based on characteristic functions and a differential operator similar to (2.3). The basic observation is that the characteristic function   of the standard normal distribution satisfies the differential equation   for all  . Thus, if the characteristic function   of   is such that   we expect that   and hence that   is close to the normal distribution. Tikhomirov states in his paper that he was inspired by Stein's seminal paper.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b Stein, C. (1972). "A bound for the error in the normal approximation to the distribution of a sum of dependent random variables". Proceedings of the Sixth Berkeley Symposium on Mathematical Statistics and Probability, Volume 2. Vol. 6. University of California Press. pp. 583–602. MR 0402873. Zbl 0278.60026.
  2. ^ Charles Stein: The Invariant, the Direct and the "Pretentious" Archived 2007-07-05 at the Wayback Machine. Interview given in 2003 in Singapore
  3. ^ Chen, L.H.Y. (1975). "Poisson approximation for dependent trials". Annals of Probability. 3 (3): 534–545. doi:10.1214/aop/1176996359. JSTOR 2959474. MR 0428387. Zbl 0335.60016.
  4. ^ a b Novak, S.Y. (2011). Extreme Value Methods with Applications to Finance. Monographs on Statistics and Applied Probability. Vol. 122. CRC Press. Ch. 12. ISBN 978-1-43983-574-6.

References

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Literature

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The following text is advanced, and gives a comprehensive overview of the normal case

  • Chen, L.H.Y., Goldstein, L., and Shao, Q.M (2011). Normal approximation by Stein's method. www.springer.com. ISBN 978-3-642-15006-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

Another advanced book, but having some introductory character, is

  • Barbour, A. D.; Chen, L. H. Y., eds. (2005). An introduction to Stein's method. Lecture Notes Series, Institute for Mathematical Sciences, National University of Singapore. Vol. 4. Singapore University Press. ISBN 981-256-280-X.

A standard reference is the book by Stein,

  • Stein, C. (1986). Approximate computation of expectations. Institute of Mathematical Statistics Lecture Notes, Monograph Series, 7. Hayward, Calif.: Institute of Mathematical Statistics. ISBN 0-940600-08-0.

which contains a lot of interesting material, but may be a little hard to understand at first reading.

Despite its age, there are few standard introductory books about Stein's method available. The following recent textbook has a chapter (Chapter 2) devoted to introducing Stein's method:

Although the book

  • Barbour, A. D. and Holst, L. and Janson, S. (1992). Poisson approximation. Oxford Studies in Probability. Vol. 2. The Clarendon Press Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-852235-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

is by large parts about Poisson approximation, it contains nevertheless a lot of information about the generator approach, in particular in the context of Poisson process approximation.

The following textbook has a chapter (Chapter 10) devoted to introducing Stein's method of Poisson approximation: