Title :
MA estimation in polynomial time
Author :
Stoica, P. ; McKelvey, T. ; Mari, J.
Author_Institution :
Syst. & Control Group, Uppsala Univ., Sweden
fDate :
6/21/1905 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The parameter estimation of moving-average (MA) signals from second-order statistics was deemed for a long time to be a difficult nonlinear problem for which no computationally convenient and reliable solution was possible. In this paper we show how the problem of MA parameter estimation from sample covariances can be formulated as a semidefinite program which can be solved in polynomial time as efficiently as a linear program. The method proposed relies on a specific (over)parameterization of the MA covariance sequence, whose use makes the minimization of the covariance fitting criterion a convex problem. The MA estimation algorithm proposed here is computationally fast, statistically accurate, and reliable (i.e. it “never” fails). None of the previously available algorithms for MA estimation (methods based on higher-order statistics included) shares all these desirable properties. Our method can also be used to obtain the optimal least squares approximant of an invalid (estimated) MA spectrum (that takes on negative values at some frequencies), which was another long-standing problem in the signal processing literature awaiting a satisfactory solution
Keywords :
computational complexity; convex programming; covariance analysis; minimisation; moving average processes; parameter estimation; sequences; MA covariance sequence; MA parameter estimation; computationally fast algorithm; convex problem; covariance fitting criterion minimization; invalid estimated MA spectrum; moving-average signals; nonlinear problem; optimal least-squares approximant; overparameterization; polynomial time; reliable algorithm; sample covariances; second-order statistics; semidefinite program; statistically accurate algorithm; Councils; Ear; Econometrics; Least squares approximation; Minimization methods; Multidimensional signal processing; Parameter estimation; Polynomials; Signal processing algorithms; Statistics;
Conference_Titel :
Decision and Control, 1999. Proceedings of the 38th IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location :
Phoenix, AZ
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5250-5
DOI :
10.1109/CDC.1999.827924