Gaussian mixture model sometimes seems to fit very badly
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the cyclist
am 27 Okt. 2014
Beantwortet: Tom Lane
am 27 Okt. 2014
In the following code, I fit a gaussian mixture model (GMM) to some randomly sampled data. I do this twice. Each time, the data represent two well separated gaussians, the only difference being the seed I use for the random number generator.
N = 100000;
EFFECT_SIZE = 5;
seedList = [1 6];
for s = seedList
rng(s)
X = [randn(N,1); randn(N,1)+EFFECT_SIZE];
figure
hist(X,101)
GMModel = fitgmdist(X,2)
end
If you run that code -- you will need the Statistics Toolbox -- you will see that the first distribution is fit very well, and the second one terribly. I am trying to understand why. I would expect such well separated peaks to be fit well essentially every time.
This is not a fluke. I ran 1,000 different seeds, and got the bad fit about 18% of the time. Also, those bad fits tend to cluster relatively close the same parameter values.
Any thoughts? I am a novice at using GMM, so maybe I am just naive about how well this should do.
I am running R2014b on Mac OS X Yosemite.
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Tom Lane
am 27 Okt. 2014
Hi cyclist, the default starting values are selected from the data at random, and you have discovered that this sometimes does not work well. There's an argument 'replicates' that you can use to have it try this multiple times and deliver the bone fit. However, in more recent releases including R2014b there is a new argument 'Start','plus' that uses a better starting method, one based on the kmeans++ algorithm for clustering. Here's a variant of your function that shows the relative performance of the default random start and the 'plus' start:
N = 100000;
EFFECT_SIZE = 5;
seedList = 1:20;
means1 = zeros(length(seedList),2);
means2 = zeros(length(seedList),2);
for s = seedList
s
rng(s)
X = [randn(N,1); randn(N,1)+EFFECT_SIZE];
rng(s) % randomness is used in the fit also
GMModel = fitgmdist(X,2);
means1(s,:) = GMModel.mu';
rng(s)
GMModel = fitgmdist(X,2,'start','plus');
means2(s,:) = GMModel.mu';
end
plot(means1(:,1),means1(:,2),'bx',means2(:,1),means2(:,2),'ro')
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