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  1. We consider the problem of inferring the conditional independence graph (CIG) of a sparse, high-dimensional, stationary matrix-variate Gaussian time series. All past work on high-dimensional matrix graphical models assumes that independent and identically distributed (i.i.d.) observations of the matrix-variate are available. Here we allow dependent observations. We consider a sparse-group lasso-based frequency-domain formulation of the problem with a Kronecker-decomposable power spectral density (PSD), and solve it via an alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) approach. The problem is biconvex which is solved via flip-flop optimization. We provide sufficient conditions for local convergence in the Frobenius norm of the inverse PSD estimators to the true value. This result also yields a rate of convergence. We illustrate our approach using numerical examples utilizing both synthetic and real data. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 1, 2025
  2. We consider the problem of inferring the conditional independence graph (CIG) of a sparse, high-dimensional, stationary matrix-variate Gaussian time series. The correlation function of the matrix series is Kronecker-decomposable. Unlike most past work on matrix graphical models, where independent and identically distributed (i.i.d.) observations of matrix-variate are assumed to be available, we allow time-dependent observations. We follow a time-delay embedding approach where with each matrix node, we associate a random vector consisting of a scalar series component and its time-delayed copies. A group-lasso penalized negative pseudo log-likelihood (NPLL) objective function is formulated to estimate a Kronecker-decomposable covariance matrix which allows for inference of the underlying CIG. The NPLL function is bi-convex and the Kronecker-decomposable covariance matrix is estimated via flip-flop optimization of the NPLL function. Each iteration of flip-flop optimization is solved via an alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) approach. Numerical results illustrate the proposed approach which outperforms an existing i.i.d. modeling based approach as well as an existing frequency-domain approach for dependent data, in correctly detecting the graph edges. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 14, 2025
  3. We consider the problem of estimating differences in two Gaussian graphical models (GGMs) which are known to have similar structure. The GGM structure is encoded in its precision (inverse covariance) matrix. In many applications one is interested in estimating the difference in two precision matrices to characterize underlying changes in conditional dependencies of two sets of data. Existing methods for differential graph estimation are based on single-attribute (SA) models where one associates a scalar random variable with each node. In multi-attribute (MA) graphical models, each node represents a random vector. In this paper, we analyze a group lasso penalized D-trace loss function approach for differential graph learning from multi-attribute data. An alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) algorithm is presented to optimize the objective function. Theoretical analysis establishing consistency in support recovery and estimation in high-dimensional settings is provided. Numerical results based on synthetic as well as real data are presented. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 15, 2024
  4. We consider the problem of estimating differences in two time series Gaussian graphical models (TSGGMs) which are known to have similar structure. The TSGGM structure is encoded in its inverse power spectral density (IPSD) just as the vector GGM structure is encoded in its precision (inverse covariance) matrix. Motivated by many applications, in existing works one is interested in estimating the difference in two precision matrices to characterize underlying changes in conditional dependencies of two sets of data comprised of independent and identically distributed observations. In this paper we consider estimation of the difference in two IPSD's to char-acterize underlying changes in conditional dependencies of two sets of time-dependent data. We analyze a group lasso penalized D-trace loss function approach in the frequency domain for differential graph learning, using Wirtinger calculus. An alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) algorithm is presented to optimize the objective function. Theoretical analysis establishing consistency of IPSD difference estimator in high-dimensional settings is presented. We illustrate our approach using a numerical example. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 10, 2024
  5. We consider the problem of inferring the conditional independence graph (CIG) of a sparse, high-dimensional, stationary matrix-variate Gaussian time series. All past work on matrix graphical models assume that i.i.d. observations of matrix-variate are available. Here we allow dependent observations. We consider a sparse-group lasso based frequency-domain formulation of the problem with a Kronecker-decomposable power spectral density (PSD), and solve it via an alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) approach. The problem is bi-convex which is solved via flip-flop optimization. We provide sufficient conditions for local convergence in the Frobenius norm of the inverse PSD estimators to the true value. This results also yields a rate of convergence. We illustrate our approach using numerical examples. 
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  6. We consider the problem of estimating differences in two Gaussian graphical models (GGMs) which are known to have similar structure. The GGM structure is encoded in its precision (inverse covariance) matrix. In many applications one is interested in estimating the difference in two precision matrices to characterize underlying changes in conditional dependencies of two sets of data. Most existing methods for differential graph estimation are based on a lasso penalized loss function. In this paper, we analyze a log-sum penalized D-trace loss function approach for differential graph learning. An alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) algorithm is presented to optimize the objective function. Theoretical analysis establishing consistency in estimation in high-dimensional settings is provided. We illustrate our approach using a numerical example where log-sum penalized D-trace loss significantly outperforms lasso-penalized D-trace loss as well as smoothly clipped absolute deviation (SCAD) penalized D-trace loss. 
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  7. We consider the problem of estimating differences in two Gaussian graphical models (GGMs) which are known to have similar structure. The GGM structure is encoded in its precision (inverse covariance) matrix. In many applications one is interested in estimating the difference in two precision matrices to characterize underlying changes in conditional dependencies of two sets of data. Existing methods for differential graph estimation are based on single-attribute models where one associates a scalar random variable with each node. In multi-attribute graphical models, each node represents a random vector. In this paper, we analyze a group lasso penalized D-trace loss function approach for differential graph learning from multi-attribute data. An alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) algorithm is presented to optimize the objective function. Theoretical analysis establishing consistency in support recovery and estimation in high-dimensional settings is provided. We illustrate our approach using a numerical example where the multi-attribute approach is shown to outperform a single-attribute approach. 
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  8. We consider the problem of inferring the conditional independence graph (CIG) of a high-dimensional stationary, multivariate long-range dependent (LRD) Gaussian time series. In a time series graph, each component of the vector series is represented by a distinct node, and associations between components are represented by edges between the corresponding nodes. In a recent work on graphical modeling of short-range dependent (SRD) Gaussian time series, the problem was cast as one of multi-attribute graph estimation for random vectors where a vector is associated with each node of the graph. At each node, the associated random vector consists of a time series component and its delayed copies. A theoretical analysis based on short-range dependence has been given in Tugnait (2022 ICASSP). In this paper we analyze this approach for LRD Gaussian time series and provide consistency results regarding convergence in the Frobenius norm of the inverse covariance matrix associated with the multi-attribute graph. 
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  9. We consider the problem of inferring the conditional independence graph (CIG) of a high-dimensional stationary multivariate Gaussian time series. In a time series graph, each component of the vector series is represented by distinct node, and associations between components are represented by edges between the corresponding nodes. We formulate the problem as one of multi-attribute graph estimation for random vectors where a vector is associated with each node of the graph. At each node, the associated random vector consists of a time series component and its delayed copies. We present an alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) solution to minimize a sparse-group lasso penalized negative pseudo log-likelihood objective function to estimate the precision matrix of the random vector associated with the entire multi-attribute graph. The time series CIG is then inferred from the estimated precision matrix. A theoretical analysis is provided. Numerical results illustrate the proposed approach which outperforms existing frequency-domain approaches in correctly detecting the graph edges. 
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