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Consistent detection and estimation of multiple structural changes in functional data: unsupervised and supervised approaches
Consistent detection and estimation of multiple structural changes in functional data: unsupervised and supervised approaches
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Consistent detection and estimation of multiple structural changes in functional data: unsupervised and supervised approaches
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Consistent detection and estimation of multiple structural changes in functional data: unsupervised and supervised approaches
Consistent detection and estimation of multiple structural changes in functional data: unsupervised and supervised approaches

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Consistent detection and estimation of multiple structural changes in functional data: unsupervised and supervised approaches
Consistent detection and estimation of multiple structural changes in functional data: unsupervised and supervised approaches
Paper

Consistent detection and estimation of multiple structural changes in functional data: unsupervised and supervised approaches

2025
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Overview
We develop algorithms for detecting multiple changepoints in functional data when the number of changepoints is unknown (unsupervised case), when it is specified apriori (supervised case), and when certain bounds are available (semi-supervised case). These algorithms utilize the maximum mean discrepancy (MMD) measure between distributions on Hilbert spaces. We develop an oracle analysis of the changepoint detection problem which reveals an interesting relationship between the true changepoint locations and the local maxima of the oracle MMD curve. The proposed algorithms are shown to detect general distributional changes by exploiting this connection. In the unsupervised case, we test the significance of a potential changepoint and establish its consistency under the single changepoint setting. We investigate the strong consistency of the changepoint estimators in both single and multiple changepoint settings. In both supervised and semi-supervised scenarios, we include a step to merge consecutive groups that are similar to appropriately utilize the prior information about the number of changepoints. In the supervised scenario, the algorithm satisfies an order-preserving property: the estimated changepoints are contained in the true set of changepoints in the underspecified case, while they contain the true set under overspecification. We evaluate the performance of the algorithms on a variety of datasets demonstrating the superiority of the proposed algorithms compared to some of the existing methods.
Publisher
Cornell University Library, arXiv.org