Title :
Group testing and sparse signal recovery
Author :
Gilbert, Anna C. ; Iwen, Mark A. ; Strauss, Martin J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Math., Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
Abstract :
Traditionally, group testing is a design problem. The goal is to design an optimally efficient set of tests of items such that the test results contain enough information to determine a small subset of items of interest. It has its roots in the statistics community and was originally designed for the selective service during World War II to remove men with syphilis from the draft. It appears in many forms, including coin-weighing problems, experimental designs, and public health. We are interested in both the design of tests and the design of an efficient algorithm that works with the tests to determine the group of interest because many of the same techniques that are useful for designing tests are also used to solve algorithmic problems in compressive sensing, as well as to analyze and recover statistical quantities from streaming data. This article is an expository article, with the purpose of examining the relationship between group testing and compressive sensing, along with their applications and connections to sparse function learning.
Keywords :
interpolation; signal processing; statistical analysis; algorithmic problems; coin-weighing problems; group testing; selective service; sparse function learning; sparse signal recovery; statistical quantities; statistics community; Algorithm design and analysis; Blood; Compressed sensing; Design for experiments; Machine learning algorithms; Mathematics; Public healthcare; Signal design; Statistics; Testing;
Conference_Titel :
Signals, Systems and Computers, 2008 42nd Asilomar Conference on
Conference_Location :
Pacific Grove, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2940-0
Electronic_ISBN :
1058-6393
DOI :
10.1109/ACSSC.2008.5074574