Stein's Method Meets Computational Statistics: A Review of Some Recent Developments
Andreas Anastasiou
Alessandro Barp
F. Briol
B. Ebner
Robert E. Gaunt
Fatemeh Ghaderinezhad
Jackson Gorham
A. Gretton
Christophe Ley
Qiang Liu
Lester W. Mackey
Chris J. Oates
G. Reinert
Yvik Swan

Abstract
Stein's method compares probability distributions through the study of a class of linear operators called Stein operators. While mainly studied in probability and used to underpin theoretical statistics, Stein's method has led to significant advances in computational statistics in recent years. The goal of this survey is to bring together some of these recent developments and, in doing so, to stimulate further research into the successful field of Stein's method and statistics. The topics we discuss include tools to benchmark and compare sampling methods such as approximate Markov chain Monte Carlo, deterministic alternatives to sampling methods, control variate techniques, parameter estimation and goodness-of-fit testing.
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