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Particle ancestor sampling for near-degenerate or intractable state transition models

We consider Bayesian inference in sequential latent variable models in general, and in nonlinear state space models in particular (i.e., state smoothing). We work with sequential Monte Carlo (SMC) algorithms, which provide a powerful inference framework for addressing this problem. However, for certain challenging and common model classes the state-of-the-art algorithms still struggle. The work is motivated in particular by two such model classes: (i) models where the state transition kernel is (nearly) degenerate, i.e. (nearly) concentrated on a low-dimensional manifold, and (ii) models where point-wise evaluation of the state transition density is intractable. Both types of models arise in many applications of interest, including tracking, epidemiology, and econometrics. The difficulties with these types of models is that they essentially rule out forward-backward-based methods, which are known to be of great practical importance, not least to construct computationally efficient particle Markov chain Monte Carlo (PMCMC) algorithms. To alleviate this, we propose a "particle rejuvenation" technique to enable the use of the forward-backward strategy for (nearly) degenerate models and, by extension, for intractable models. We derive the proposed method specifically within the context of PMCMC, but we emphasise that it is applicable to any forward-backward-based Monte Carlo method.

preprint2015arXivOpen access
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