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Random Feature Stein Discrepancies

Abstract

Computable Stein discrepancies have been deployed for a variety of applications, including sampler selection in posterior inference, approximate Bayesian inference, and goodness-of-fit testing. Existing convergence-determining Stein discrepancies admit strong theoretical guarantees but suffer from a computational cost that grows quadratically in the sample size. While linear-time Stein discrepancies have been proposed for goodness-of-fit testing, they exhibit avoidable degradations in testing power---even when power is explicitly optimized. To address these shortcomings, we introduce feature Stein discrepancies (Φ\PhiSDs), a new family of quality measures that can be cheaply approximated using importance sampling. We show how to construct Φ\PhiSDs that provably determine the convergence of a sample to its target and develop high-accuracy approximations---random Φ\PhiSDs (RΦ\PhiSDs)---which are computable in near-linear time. In our experiments with sampler selection for approximate posterior inference and goodness-of-fit testing, RΦ\PhiSDs typically perform as well or better than quadratic-time KSDs while being orders of magnitude faster to compute.

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