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Classic central limit Thm (Second Fundamental probabilistic):

"The distribution of the average of a large number of samples from a distribution tends to be normal"

let X1,X2,...,Xn be n independent and identically distributed variables (i.i.d) with finite mean $ \mu $ and finite variance $ \sigma^2>0 $.Then as n increases the distribution of $ \Sigma_{i=1}^n \frac{X_i} {n} $ approaches $ N(\mu,\frac {\sigma^2}{n}) $.

More precisely the random variable $ Z_n = \frac{\Sigma_{i=1}^n X_i - n \mu}{\sigma \sqrt{n}} $ has $ P(Z_n)\longrightarrow N(0,1) $ when $ n \longrightarrow \infty $

More generalization of central limit Thm.

let X1,X2,...,Xn be n independent variables

Xi has mean $ \mu_i $ & finite variance $ \sigma^2 > 0 $ ,i=1,2,...,n

Then $ Z_n = \frac{\Sigma_{i=1}^n X_i - \Sigma_{i=1}^n \mu_i} {\sqrt{\Sigma_{i=1}^n \sigma^2}} $ has $ P(Z_n)\longrightarrow N(\mu ,\Sigma) $ when $ n \longrightarrow \infty $


Error bounds for Bayes decision rule:

As we know Bayes decision rule guarantees the lowest average error rate; It Does not tell what the probability of error actually is. Therefore people try to find upper bounds for that: Chernoff and Bhattacharyya bounds

$ P(error)=\int_{R^n} p(error,x)dx = \int_{R^n} p(error|x)p(x)dx $

in two class case we have:

$ p(error|x) = min \{ p(\omega_1|x) , p(\omega_2|x) \} $ $ \Rightarrow P(error)= \int_{R^n}min\{p(\omega_1|x),p(\omega_2|x)\} p(x)dx $

as we know from Lemma: $ min \{a,b\}\leq a^\beta b^ {1-\beta} $, $ \forall a,b \geq 0 , \forall \beta s.t 0 \leq\beta\leq 1 $

$ P(error)\leq \int_{R^n} p(\omega_1 |x)^\beta p(\omega_2 |x)^{1-\beta} p(x) dx $ , $ \forall 0 \leq \beta \leq 1 $

$ P(error)\leq \int_{R^n} ({\frac {p(x|\omega)P(\omega_1)}{p(x)}})^\beta ({\frac {p(x|\omega_2)P(\omega_2)}{p(x)}})^{1-\beta} p(x) dx $ , $ \forall 0 \leq \beta \leq 1 $

$ P(error)\leq P(\omega_1) ^\beta P(\omega_2)^ {1-\beta} \int_{R^n} p(x|\omega_1)^\beta p(x|\omega_2)^{1-\beta} dx =: \varepsilon_\beta $ , $ \forall 0 \leq \beta \leq 1 $

The lower bound $ S:= min\varepsilon_\beta $ , $ \beta \in [0,1] $is an upper bound for P(error).

S is called "Chernoff Bound" and $ \varepsilon_{1/2} $ is called "Bhattacharyya Bound"

Alumni Liaison

Correspondence Chess Grandmaster and Purdue Alumni

Prof. Dan Fleetwood