Permutation invariant functions: statistical tests, dimension reduction
in metric entropy and estimation
Permutation invariance is among the most common symmetry that can be exploited to simplify complex problems in machine learning (ML). There has been a tremendous surge of research activities in building permutation invariant ML architectures. However, less attention is given to how to statistically test for permutation invariance of variables in a multivariate probability distribution where the dimension is allowed to grow with the sample size. Also, in terms of a statistical theory, little is known about how permutation invariance helps with estimation in reducing dimensions. In this paper, we take a step back and examine these questions in several fundamental problems: (i) testing the assumption of permutation invariance of multivariate distributions; (ii) estimating permutation invariant densities; (iii) analyzing the metric entropy of smooth permutation invariant function classes and compare them with their counterparts without imposing permutation invariance; (iv) kernel ridge regression of permutation invariant functions in reproducing kernel Hilbert space. In particular, our methods for (i) and (iv) are based on a sorting trick and (ii) is based on an averaging trick. These tricks substantially simplify the exploitation of permutation invariance.
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