In statistics, inverse-variance weighting is a method of aggregating two or more random variables to minimize the variance of the weighted average. Each random variable is weighted in inverse proportion to its variance (i.e., proportional to its precision).
Given a sequence of independent observations yi with variances σi2, the inverse-variance weighted average is given by[1]
The inverse-variance weighted average has the least variance among all weighted averages, which can be calculated as
If the variances of the measurements are all equal, then the inverse-variance weighted average becomes the simple average.
Inverse-variance weighting is typically used in statistical meta-analysis or sensor fusion to combine the results from independent measurements.
Context
editSuppose an experimenter wishes to measure the value of a quantity, say the acceleration due to gravity of Earth, whose true value happens to be . A careful experimenter makes multiple measurements, which we denote with random variables . If they are all noisy but unbiased, i.e., the measuring device does not systematically overestimate or underestimate the true value and the errors are scattered symmetrically, then the expectation value . The scatter in the measurement is then characterised by the variance of the random variables , and if the measurements are performed under identical scenarios, then all the are the same, which we shall refer to by . Given the measurements, a typical estimator for , denoted as , is given by the simple average . Note that this empirical average is also a random variable, whose expectation value is but also has a scatter. If the individual measurements are uncorrelated, the square of the error in the estimate is given by . Hence, if all the are equal, then the error in the estimate decreases with increase in as , thus making more observations preferred.
Instead of repeated measurements with one instrument, if the experimenter makes of the same quantity with different instruments with varying quality of measurements, then there is no reason to expect the different to be the same. Some instruments could be noisier than others. In the example of measuring the acceleration due to gravity, the different "instruments" could be measuring from a simple pendulum, from analysing a projectile motion etc. The simple average is no longer an optimal estimator, since the error in might actually exceed the error in the least noisy measurement if different measurements have very different errors. Instead of discarding the noisy measurements that increase the final error, the experimenter can combine all the measurements with appropriate weights so as to give more importance to the least noisy measurements and vice versa. Given the knowledge of , an optimal estimator to measure would be a weighted mean of the measurements , for the particular choice of the weights . The variance of the estimator , which for the optimal choice of the weights become
Note that since , the estimator has a scatter smaller than the scatter in any individual measurement. Furthermore, the scatter in decreases with adding more measurements, however noisier those measurements may be.
Derivation
editUncorrelated measurements
editConsider a generic weighted sum , where the weights are normalised such that . If the are all independent, the variance of is given by (see Bienaymé's identity)
For optimality, we wish to minimise which can be done by equating the gradient with respect to the weights of to zero, while maintaining the constraint that . Using a Lagrange multiplier to enforce the constraint, we express the variance:
For ,
which implies that:
The main takeaway here is that . Since ,
The individual normalised weights are:
It is easy to see that this extremum solution corresponds to the minimum from the second partial derivative test by noting that the variance is a quadratic function of the weights. Thus, the minimum variance of the estimator is then given by:
Correlated measurements
editThis article is missing information about correlated measurements should involve the complete covariance matrix.(October 2024) |
Normal distributions
editFor normally distributed random variables inverse-variance weighted averages can also be derived as the maximum likelihood estimate for the true value. Furthermore, from a Bayesian perspective the posterior distribution for the true value given normally distributed observations and a flat prior is a normal distribution with the inverse-variance weighted average as a mean and variance .
Multivariate case
editFor potentially correlated multivariate distributions an equivalent argument leads to an optimal weighting based on the covariance matrices of the individual vector-valued estimates :
For multivariate distributions the term "precision-weighted" average is more commonly used.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Joachim Hartung; Guido Knapp; Bimal K. Sinha (2008). Statistical meta-analysis with applications. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-470-29089-7.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2012) |