Title :
Robust minimax detection of a weak signal in noise with a bounded variance and density value at the center of symmetry
Author :
Shevlyakov, Georgy ; Kim, Kiseon
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Inf. & Commun., Gwangju Inst. of Sci. & Technol.
fDate :
3/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In practical communication environments, it is frequently observed that the underlying noise distribution is not Gaussian and may vary in a wide range from short-tailed to heavy-tailed forms. To describe partially known noise distribution densities, a distribution class characterized by the upper-bounds upon a noise variance and a density dispersion in the central part is used. The results on the minimax variance estimation in the Huber sense are applied to the problem of asymptotically minimax detection of a weak signal. The least favorable density minimizing Fisher information over this class is called the Weber-Hermite density and it has the Gaussian and Laplace densities as limiting cases. The subsequent minimax detector has the following form: i) with relatively small variances, it is the minimum L2-norm distance rule; ii) with relatively large variances, it is the L1 -norm distance rule; iii) it is a compromise between these extremes with relatively moderate variances. It is shown that the proposed minimax detector is robust and close to Huber´s for heavy-tailed distributions and more efficient than Huber´s for short-tailed ones both in asymptotics and on finite samples
Keywords :
Gaussian noise; minimax techniques; signal denoising; signal detection; Fisher information; Gaussian-Laplace density; L1-norm distance rule; Weber-Hermite density; aysmptotic minimax detection; bounded variance; heavy-tailed distribution; symmetry centre; variance estimation; weak noise signal distribution; Additive noise; Bayesian methods; Detectors; Error probability; Minimax techniques; Noise robustness; Signal processing; Statistical analysis; Testing; Working environment noise; Huber´s; least favorable distributions; non-Gaussian noise; robust minimum distance detection;
Journal_Title :
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIT.2005.864462