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44th Annual IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS'03)
Always Good Turing: Asymptotically Optimal Probability Estimation
Cambridge, Massachusettes
October 11-October 14
ISBN: 0-7695-2040-5
Alon Orlitsky, University of California at San Diego
Narayana P. Santhanam, University of California at San Diego
Junan Zhang, University of California at San Diego
While deciphering the German Enigma code during World War II, I.J. Good and A.M. Turing considered the problem of estimating a probability distribution from a sample of data. THey derived a surprising and unintuitive formula that has since been used in a variety of applications and studied by a number of researchers. Borrowing an information-theoretic and machine-learning framework, we define the attenuation of a probability estimator as the largest possible ratio between the per-symbol probability assigned to an arbitrarily-long sequence by any distribution, and the corresponding probability assigned by the estimator. We show that some common estimators have infinite attenuation and that the attenuation of the Good-Turing estimator is low, yet large than one. We then derive an estimator whose attenuation is one, namely, as the length of any sequence increases, the per-symbol probability assigned by the estimator is at least the highest possible. Interestingly, some of the proofs use celebrated results by Hardy and Ramanujan on the number of partitions of an integer. To better understand the behavior of the estimator, we study the probability it assigns to several simple sequences. We show that some sequences this probability agrees with our intuition, while for others it is rather unexpected.
Citation:
Alon Orlitsky, Narayana P. Santhanam, Junan Zhang, "Always Good Turing: Asymptotically Optimal Probability Estimation," focs, pp.179, 44th Annual IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS'03), 2003
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