Litcius/Paper detail

Rate-optimal robust estimation of high-dimensional vector autoregressive models

Di Wang, Ruey S. Tsay

2023The Annals of Statistics14 citationsDOI

Abstract

High-dimensional time series data appear in many scientific areas in the current data-rich environment. Analysis of such data poses new challenges to data analysts because of not only the complicated dynamic dependence between the series, but also the existence of aberrant observations, such as missing values, contaminated observations, and heavy-tailed distributions. For high-dimensional vector autoregressive (VAR) models, we introduce a unified estimation procedure that is robust to model misspecification, heavy-tailed noise contamination, and conditional heteroscedasticity. The proposed methodology enjoys both statistical optimality and computational efficiency, and can handle many popular high-dimensional models, such as sparse, reduced-rank, banded, and network-structured VAR models. With proper regularization and data truncation, the estimation convergence rates are shown to be almost optimal in the minimax sense under a bounded (2+2ϵ)th moment condition. When ϵ≥1, the rates of convergence match those obtained under the sub-Gaussian assumption. Consistency of the proposed estimators is also established for some ϵ∈(0,1), with minimax optimal convergence rates associated with ϵ. The efficacy of the proposed estimation methods is demonstrated by simulation and a U.S. macroeconomic example.

Topics & Concepts

Autoregressive modelMathematicsEstimatorHeteroscedasticityRate of convergenceMoment (physics)Series (stratigraphy)Truncation (statistics)MinimaxAutoregressive conditional heteroskedasticityConsistency (knowledge bases)Convergence (economics)Applied mathematicsMathematical optimizationEconometricsStatisticsComputer scienceVolatility (finance)Computer networkBiologyEconomic growthChannel (broadcasting)PhysicsGeometryEconomicsClassical mechanicsPaleontologyStatistical Methods and InferenceAdvanced Statistical Methods and ModelsStatistical Methods and Bayesian Inference