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Section: New Results

Semi and non-parametric methods

Estimation of extreme risk measures

Participant : Stéphane Girard.

Joint work with: A. Daouia (Univ. Toulouse), L. Gardes (Univ. Strasbourg), J. Elmethni (Univ. Paris 5) and G. Stupfler (Univ. Nottingham, UK).

One of the most popular risk measures is the Value-at-Risk (VaR) introduced in the 1990's. In statistical terms, the VaR at level α(0,1) corresponds to the upper α-quantile of the loss distribution. The Value-at-Risk however suffers from several weaknesses. First, it provides us only with a pointwise information: VaR(α) does not take into consideration what the loss will be beyond this quantile. Second, random loss variables with light-tailed distributions or heavy-tailed distributions may have the same Value-at-Risk. Finally, Value-at-Risk is not a coherent risk measure since it is not subadditive in general. A first coherent alternative risk measure is the Conditional Tail Expectation (CTE), also known as Tail-Value-at-Risk, Tail Conditional Expectation or Expected Shortfall in case of a continuous loss distribution. The CTE is defined as the expected loss given that the loss lies above the upper α-quantile of the loss distribution. This risk measure thus takes into account the whole information contained in the upper tail of the distribution. In [20], we investigate the extreme properties of a new risk measure (called the Conditional Tail Moment) which encompasses various risk measures, such as the CTE, as particular cases. We study the situation where some covariate information is available under some general conditions on the distribution tail. We thus has to deal with conditional extremes. However, the asymptotic normality of the empirical CTE estimator requires that the underlying distribution possess a finite variance; this can be a strong restriction in heavy-tailed models which constitute the favoured class of models in actuarial and financial applications. One possible solution in very heavy-tailed models where this assumption fails could be to use the more robust Median Shortfall, but this quantity is actually just a quantile, which therefore only gives information about the frequency of a tail event and not about its typical magnitude. In [65], we construct a synthetic class of tail Lp −medians, which encompasses the Median Shortfall (for p=1) and Conditional Tail Expectation (for p=2). We show that, for 1<p<2, a tail Lp −median always takes into account both the frequency and magnitude of tail events, and its empirical estimator is, within the range of the data, asymptotically normal under a condition weaker than a finite variance. We extrapolate this estimator, along with another technique, to proper extreme levels using the heavy-tailed framework. The estimators are showcased on a simulation study and on a set of real fire insurance data showing evidence of a very heavy right tail.

A possible coherent alternative risk measure is based on expectiles [18], [63], [62]. Compared to quantiles, the family of expectiles is based on squared rather than absolute error loss minimization. The flexibility and virtues of these least squares analogues of quantiles are now well established in actuarial science, econometrics and statistical finance. Both quantiles and expectiles were embedded in the more general class of M-quantiles [19] as the minimizers of a generic asymmetric convex loss function. It has been proved very recently that the only M-quantiles that are coherent risk measures are the expectiles.

Extrapolation limits associated with extreme-value methods

Participants : Clément Albert, Stéphane Girard.

Joint work with: L. Gardes (Univ. Strasbourg) and A. Dutfoy (EDF R&D).

The PhD thesis of Clément Albert (co-funded by EDF) is dedicated to the study of the sensitivity of extreme-value methods to small changes in the data and to their extrapolation ability. Two directions are explored:

(i) In [54], we investigate the asymptotic behavior of the (relative) extrapolation error associated with some estimators of extreme quantiles based on extreme-value theory. It is shown that the extrapolation error can be interpreted as the remainder of a first order Taylor expansion. Necessary and sufficient conditions are then provided such that this error tends to zero as the sample size increases. Interestingly, in case of the so-called Exponential Tail estimator, these conditions lead to a subdivision of Gumbel maximum domain of attraction into three subsets. In constrast, the extrapolation error associated with Weissman estimator has a common behavior over the whole Fréchet maximum domain of attraction. First order equivalents of the extrapolation error are then derived and their accuracy is illustrated numerically.

(ii) In [53], We propose a new estimator for extreme quantiles under the log-generalized Weibull-tail model, introduced by Cees de Valk. This model relies on a new regular variation condition which, in some situations, permits to extrapolate further into the tails than the classical assumption in extreme-value theory. The asymptotic normality of the estimator is established and its finite sample properties are illustrated both on simulated and real datasets.

Estimation of local intrinsic dimensionality with extreme-value methods

Participant : Stéphane Girard.

Joint work with: L. Amsaleg (LinkMedia, Inria Rennes), O. Chelly (NII Japon), T. Furon (LinkMedia, Inria Rennes), M. Houle (NII Japon), K.-I. Kawarabayashi (NII Japon), M. Nett (Google).

This work is concerned with the estimation of a local measure of intrinsic dimensionality (ID). The local model can be regarded as an extension of Karger and Ruhl’s expansion dimension to a statistical setting in which the distribution of distances to a query point is modeled in terms of a continuous random variable. This form of intrinsic dimensionality can be particularly useful in search, classification, outlier detection, and other contexts in machine learning, databases, and data mining, as it has been shown to be equivalent to a measure of the discriminative power of similarity functions. In [14], several estimators of local ID are proposed and analyzed based on extreme value theory, using maximum likelihood estimation, the method of moments, probability weighted moments, and regularly varying functions. An experimental evaluation is also provided, using both real and artificial data.

Bayesian inference for copulas

Participants : Julyan Arbel, Marta Crispino, Stéphane Girard.

We study in [58] a broad class of asymmetric copulas known as Liebscher copulas and defined as a combination of multiple—usually symmetric—copulas. The main thrust of this work is to provide new theoretical properties including exact tail dependence expressions and stability properties. A subclass of Liebscher copulas obtained by combining Fréchet copulas is studied in more details. We establish further dependence properties for copulas of this class and show that they are characterized by an arbitrary number of singular components. Furthermore, we introduce a novel iterative construction for general Liebscher copulas which de facto insures uniform margins, thus relaxing a constraint of Liebscher's original construction. Besides, we show that this iterative construction proves useful for inference by developing an Approximate Bayesian computation sampling scheme. This inferential procedure is demonstrated on simulated data.

In [22], we investigate the properties of a new transformation of copulas based on the co-copula and an univariate function. It is shown that several families in the copula literature can be interpreted as particular outputs of this transformation. Symmetry, association, ordering and dependence properties of the resulting copula are established.

Bayesian nonparametric clustering

Participant : Julyan Arbel.

Joint work with: Riccardo Corradin from Milano Bicocca, Michal Lewandowski from Bocconi University, Milan, Italy, Caroline Lawless from Université Paris-Dauphine, France.

For a long time, the Dirichlet process has been the gold standard discrete random measure in Bayesian nonparametrics. The Pitman–Yor process provides a simple and mathematically tractable generalization, allowing for a very flexible control of the clustering behaviour. Two commonly used representations of the Pitman–Yor process are the stick-breaking process and the Chinese restaurant process. The former is a constructive representation of the process which turns out very handy for practical implementation, while the latter describes the partition distribution induced. Obtaining one from the other is usually done indirectly with use of measure theory. In contrast, we propose in [66] an elementary proof of Pitman–Yor's Chinese Restaurant process from its stick-breaking representation.

In the discussion paper [56], we propose a simulation study to emphasise the difference between Variation of Information and Binder's loss functions in terms of number of clusters estimated by means of the use of the Markov chain Monte Carlo output only and a “greedy” method.

The chapter [47] is part of a book edited by Stéphane Girard and Julyan Arbel. It presents a Bayesian nonparametric approach to clustering, which is particularly relevant when the number of components in the clustering is unknown. The approach is illustrated with the Milky Way's globulars, that are clouds of stars orbiting in our galaxy. Clustering globulars is key for better understanding the Milky Way's history. We define the Dirichlet process and illustrate some alternative definitions such as the Chinese restaurant process, the Pólya Urn, the Ewens sampling formula, the stick-breaking representation through some simple R code. The Dirichlet process mixture model is presented, as well as the R package BNPmix implementing Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling. Inference for the clustering is done with the variation of information loss function.

Multi sensor fusion for acoustic surveillance and monitoring

Participants : Florence Forbes, Jean-Michel Bécu.

Joint work with: Pascal Vouagner and Christophe Thirard from ACOEM company.

In the context of the DGA-rapid WIFUZ project, we addressed the issue of determining the localization of shots from multiple measurements coming from multiple sensors. The WIFUZ project is a collaborative work between various partners: DGA, ACOEM and HIKOB companies and Inria. This project is at the intersection of data fusion, statistics, machine learning and acoustic signal processing. The general context is the surveillance and monitoring of a zone acoustic state from data acquired at a continuous rate by a set of sensors that are potentially mobile and of different nature. The overall objective is to develop a prototype for surveillance and monitoring that is able to combine multi sensor data coming from acoustic sensors (microphones and antennas) and optical sensors (infrared cameras) and to distribute the processing to multiple algorithmic blocs. As an illustration, the mistis contribution is to develop technical and scientific solutions as part of a collaborative protection approach, ideally used to guide the best coordinated response between the different vehicles of a military convoy. Indeed, in the case of an attack on a convoy, identifying the threatened vehicles and the origin of the threat is necessary to organize the best response from all members on the convoy. Thus it will be possible to react to the first contact (emergency detection) to provide the best answer for threatened vehicles (escape, lure) and for those not threatened (suppression fire, riposte fire). We developed statistical tools that make it possible to analyze this information (characterization of the threat) using fusion of acoustic and image data from a set of sensors located on various vehicles. We used Bayesian inversion and simulation techniques to recover multiple sources mimicking collaborative interaction between several vehicles.

Extraction and data analysis toward "industry of the future"

Participants : Florence Forbes, Hongliang Lu, Fatima Fofana, Jaime Eduardo Arias Almeida.

Joint work with: J. F. Cuccaro and J. C Trochet from Vi-Technology company.

Industry as we know it today will soon disappear. In the future, the machines which constitute the manufacturing process will communicate automatically as to optimize its performance as whole. Transmitted information essentially will be of statistical nature. In the context of VISION 4.0 project with Vi-Technology, the role of mistis is to identify what statistical methods might be useful for the printed circuits boards assembly industry. The topic of F. Fofana's internship was to extract and analyze data from two inspection machines of a industrial process making electronic cards. After a first extraction step in the SQL database, the goal was to enlighten the statistical links between these machines. Preliminary experiments and results on the Solder Paste Inspection (SPI) step, at the beginning of the line, helped identifying potentially relevant variables and measurements (eg related to stencil offsets) to identify future defects and discriminate between them. More generally, we have access to two databases at both ends (SPI and Component Inspection) of the assembly process. The goal is to improve our understanding of interactions in the assembly process, find out correlations between defects and physical measures, generate proactive alarms so as to detect departures from normality.

Change point detection for the analysis of dynamic single molecules

Participants : Florence Forbes, Theo Moins.

Joint work with: Virginie Stoppin-Mellet from Grenoble Institute of Neuroscience.

The objective of this study was to develop a statistical learning technique to analyze signals produced by molecules. The main difficulties are the noisy nature of the signals and the definition of a quality index to allow the elimination of poor-quality data and false positive signals. In collaboration with the GIN, we addressed the statistical analysis of intensity traces (2 month internship of Theo Moins, Ensimag 2A). Namely, the ImageJ Thunderstorm toolbox, which has been developed for the detection of single molecule in super resolution imaging, has been successfully used to detect immobile single molecules and generate time-dependent intensity traces. Then the R package Segmentor3IsBack, a fast segmentation algorithm based on 5 possible statistical models, proved efficient in the processing of the noisy intensity traces. This preliminary study led to a multidisciplinary project funded by the Grenoble data institute for 2 years in which we will also address additional challenges for the tracking of a large population of single molecules.