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Characterizing Evolution in Expectation-Maximization Estimates for Overspecified Mixed Linear Regression

Main:16 Pages
5 Figures
Bibliography:5 Pages
Appendix:41 Pages
Abstract

Mixture models have attracted significant attention due to practical effectiveness and comprehensive theoretical foundations. A persisting challenge is model misspecification, which occurs when the model to be fitted has more mixture components than those in the data distribution. In this paper, we develop a theoretical understanding of the Expectation-Maximization (EM) algorithm's behavior in the context of targeted model misspecification for overspecified two-component Mixed Linear Regression (2MLR) with unknown dd-dimensional regression parameters and mixing weights. In Theorem 5.1 at the population level, with an unbalanced initial guess for mixing weights, we establish linear convergence of regression parameters in O(log(1/ϵ))O(\log(1/\epsilon)) steps. Conversely, with a balanced initial guess for mixing weights, we observe sublinear convergence in O(ϵ2)O(\epsilon^{-2}) steps to achieve the ϵ\epsilon-accuracy at Euclidean distance. In Theorem 6.1 at the finite-sample level, for mixtures with sufficiently unbalanced fixed mixing weights, we demonstrate a statistical accuracy of O((d/n)1/2)O((d/n)^{1/2}), whereas for those with sufficiently balanced fixed mixing weights, the accuracy is O((d/n)1/4)O((d/n)^{1/4}) given nn data samples. Furthermore, we underscore the connection between our population level and finite-sample level results: by setting the desired final accuracy ϵ\epsilon in Theorem 5.1 to match that in Theorem 6.1 at the finite-sample level, namely letting ϵ=O((d/n)1/2)\epsilon = O((d/n)^{1/2}) for sufficiently unbalanced fixed mixing weights and ϵ=O((d/n)1/4)\epsilon = O((d/n)^{1/4}) for sufficiently balanced fixed mixing weights, we intuitively derive iteration complexity bounds O(log(1/ϵ))=O(log(n/d))O(\log (1/\epsilon))=O(\log (n/d)) and O(ϵ2)=O((n/d)1/2)O(\epsilon^{-2})=O((n/d)^{1/2}) at the finite-sample level for sufficiently unbalanced and balanced initial mixing weights. We further extend our analysis in overspecified setting to low SNR regime.

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