Jack W. Silverstein

Professor

PhD. Brown University 1975

Getting my Institute of Mathematical Statistics
Fellows plaque from Jim Pitman, at the big statistics
meeting in Salt Lake City, July 30, 2007.

My fellow ``Fellows''.

IMS News Release

Office: 140 Harrelson Hall
Phone: (919)515-7864

Interests

Probability and mathematical statistics

Spectral properties of large dimensional random matrices

I'll try to explain what the above graphs represent. The histogram in the first one is that of the eigenvalues of a sample covariance matrix (s.c.m.) formed from 4000 samples of a 200 dimensional random vector whose population covariance matrix has 3 distinct eigenvalues: 1, 3, and 10, with respective multiplicities 40, 80, and 80. The assumptions on the random vector are general enough to include multivariate normals. The function you see in both graphs is the limiting density (whose existence and properties are part of my work) of the empirical distribution of the eigenvalues of s.c.m. as the dimension and sample size approach infinity, the population eigenvalues remain at (1,3,10) with relative proportions (.2,.4,.4), and the ratio of dimension to sample size is .05. The closeness of the limiting density to the histogram displays several things: 1) the validity of the above mentioned ``limit theorem'', 2) the ``curse of high dimensionality'', namely that, even though 4000 samples were used to estimate the population matrix, because of the dimension of the random vector, the estimation is not so great, and 3) since the histogram of eigenvalues is predictable from the limit theorem and because of an understanding of how the limiting density should look, due to the relatively small ratio of dimension to sample size (.05), the histogram does reveal quite a bit of information on the eigenvalues of the population matrix (after all, there are 3 clumps centering around the population eigenvalues).

The second graph also contains a scatter plot of all 200 eigenvalues, in clumps of (from left to right) 40, 80, and 80, demonstrating Z.D. Bai and my previous results (see references 32 and 33 in publications): no eigenvalues where they shouldn't be, and the right number where they should be. These two facts, although thoroughly reasonable from the above limit theorem, are a bit more complicated to prove. The limit theorem only guarantees proportion of eigenvalues are converging to the right numbers.

Announcing

.pdf file

of my latest paper with Debashis Paul

No Eigenvalues Outside the Support of Limiting Empirical

Spectral Distribution of a Separable Covariance Matrix,

the book Zhidong Bai and I have written:

Spectral Analysis of Large Dimensional Random Matrices

Science Press, Beijing, 2006,

.pdf file

of my latest paper with Zhidong Bai

On the Signal-to-Interference-Ratio

of CDMA Systems in Wireless Communications,

.pdf file

of my latest paper with Brian Rider

Gaussian Fluctuations for

Non-Hermitian Random Matrix Ensembles,

.pdf file

of my latest papers with Brent Dozier

Analysis of the Limiting Spectral

Distribution of Large Dimensional

Information-Plus-Noise Type Matrices,

.pdf file

On the Empirical Distribution of

Eigenvalues of Large Dimensional

Information-Plus-Noise Type Matrices,

and

.pdf file

of my latest paper with Jinho Baik

Eigenvalues of Large Sample Covariance

Matrices of Spiked Population Models


Publications


MA 544: The course I offer every spring

MA 544: Computer Experiments in Mathematical Probability


My favorite group

Don't Make Waves

The best children's book series


Write to me at jack at math ncsu edu

Department of Mathematics, Box 8205
North Carolina State University
Raleigh, NC 27695-8205
(December 23, 2003)
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