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Computationally efficient likelihood inference in exponential families when the maximum likelihood estimator does not exist (1803.11240v3)

Published 29 Mar 2018 in math.ST and stat.TH

Abstract: In a regular full exponential family, the maximum likelihood estimator (MLE) need not exist in the traditional sense. However, the MLE may exist in the completion of the exponential family. Existing algorithms for finding the MLE in the completion solve many linear programs; they are slow in small problems and too slow for large problems. We provide new, fast, and scalable methodology for finding the MLE in the completion of the exponential family. This methodology is based on conventional maximum likelihood computations which come close, in a sense, to finding the MLE in the completion of the exponential family. These conventional computations construct a likelihood maximizing sequence of canonical parameter values which goes uphill on the likelihood function until they meet a convergence criteria. Nonexistence of the MLE in this context results from a degeneracy of the canonical statistic of the exponential family, the canonical statistic is on the boundary of its support. There is a correspondance between this boundary and the null eigenvectors of the Fisher information matrix. Convergence of Fisher information along a likelihood maximizing sequence follows from cumulant generating function (CGF) convergence along a likelihood maximizing sequence, conditions for which are given. This allows for the construction of necessarily one-sided confidence intervals for mean value parameters when the MLE exists in the completion. We demonstrate our methodology on three examples in the main text and three additional examples in the Appendix. We show that when the MLE exists in the completion of the exponential family, our methodology provides statistical inference that is much faster than existing techniques.

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