Outlier detection and robust covariance estimation using mathematical programming

  • Authors:
  • Tri-Dzung Nguyen;Roy E. Welsch

  • Affiliations:
  • 3103 Newmark Civil Engineering Laboratory, UIUC, Urbana, USA 61801;Center for Computational Research in Economics and Management Science, Sloan School of Management, MIT, Cambridge, USA 02139

  • Venue:
  • Advances in Data Analysis and Classification
  • Year:
  • 2010

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Abstract

The outlier detection problem and the robust covariance estimation problem are often interchangeable. Without outliers, the classical method of maximum likelihood estimation (MLE) can be used to estimate parameters of a known distribution from observational data. When outliers are present, they dominate the log likelihood function causing the MLE estimators to be pulled toward them. Many robust statistical methods have been developed to detect outliers and to produce estimators that are robust against deviation from model assumptions. However, the existing methods suffer either from computational complexity when problem size increases or from giving up desirable properties, such as affine equivariance. An alternative approach is to design a special mathematical programming model to find the optimal weights for all the observations, such that at the optimal solution, outliers are given smaller weights and can be detected. This method produces a covariance estimator that has the following properties: First, it is affine equivariant. Second, it is computationally efficient even for large problem sizes. Third, it easy to incorporate prior beliefs into the estimator by using semi-definite programming. The accuracy of this method is tested for different contamination models, including recently proposed ones. The method is not only faster than the Fast-MCD method for high dimensional data but also has reasonable accuracy for the tested cases.