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A Partial Information Decomposition for Multivariate Gaussian Systems Based on Information Geometry.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study extends partial information decomposition to multivariate Gaussian systems, providing explicit formulas and validating theoretical properties. The new algorithm shows promise but may sometimes misestimate synergy and unique information levels.

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Area of Science:

  • Information Theory
  • Statistical Modeling
  • Machine Learning

Background:

  • Partial information decomposition (PID) is crucial for understanding complex systems.
  • Existing algorithms, like Niu and Quinn's (2019), are limited to simpler cases (e.g., three scalar variables).
  • Information geometry provides a framework for analyzing probability distributions.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To generalize partial information decomposition to multivariate Gaussian systems with vector inputs and outputs.
  • To derive explicit mathematical expressions for PID components in these complex systems.
  • To validate the theoretical properties of the proposed decomposition method.

Main Methods:

  • Leveraged standard results from information geometry.
  • Derived explicit expressions for PID components in multivariate Gaussian systems.
  • Employed constrained convex optimization to determine a key parameter.

Main Results:

  • Explicit formulas for PID components in multivariate Gaussian systems were successfully derived.
  • The proposed decomposition method satisfies key theoretical properties (non-negativity, symmetry, etc.).
  • Empirical application revealed potential overestimation of synergy/shared information and underestimation of unique information in some cases.

Conclusions:

  • The generalized PID algorithm is applicable to complex multivariate Gaussian systems.
  • The method provides valuable insights but requires careful interpretation due to potential information component misestimations.
  • Comparisons with existing methods (Idep, Immi) highlight both similarities and distinct differences in results.