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Square-Root Lasso: Pivotal Recovery of Sparse Signals via Conic Programming

We propose a pivotal method for estimating high-dimensional sparse linear regression models, where the overall number of regressors $p$ is large, possibly much larger than $n$, but only $s$ regressors are significant. The method is a modification of the lasso, called the square-root lasso. The method is pivotal in that it neither relies on the knowledge of the standard deviation $σ$ or nor does it need to pre-estimate $σ$. Moreover, the method does not rely on normality or sub-Gaussianity of noise. It achieves near-oracle performance, attaining the convergence rate $σ\{(s/n)\log p\}^{1/2}$ in the prediction norm, and thus matching the performance of the lasso with known $σ$. These performance results are valid for both Gaussian and non-Gaussian errors, under some mild moment restrictions. We formulate the square-root lasso as a solution to a convex conic programming problem, which allows us to implement the estimator using efficient algorithmic methods, such as interior-point and first-order methods.

preprint2011arXivOpen access

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