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In Defense of the Indefensible: A Very Naive Approach to High-Dimensional Inference

A great deal of interest has recently focused on conducting inference on the parameters in a high-dimensional linear model. In this paper, we consider a simple and very naïve two-step procedure for this task, in which we (i) fit a lasso model in order to obtain a subset of the variables, and (ii) fit a least squares model on the lasso-selected set. Conventional statistical wisdom tells us that we cannot make use of the standard statistical inference tools for the resulting least squares model (such as confidence intervals and $p$-values), since we peeked at the data twice: once in running the lasso, and again in fitting the least squares model. However, in this paper, we show that under a certain set of assumptions, with high probability, the set of variables selected by the lasso is identical to the one selected by the noiseless lasso and is hence deterministic. Consequently, the naïve two-step approach can yield asymptotically valid inference. We utilize this finding to develop the \emph{naïve confidence interval}, which can be used to draw inference on the regression coefficients of the model selected by the lasso, as well as the \emph{naïve score test}, which can be used to test the hypotheses regarding the full-model regression coefficients.

preprint2020arXivOpen access

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