Complex inverse Wishart distribution

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Complex inverse Wishart Distribution
Notation 𝒞𝒲1(Ψ,ν,p)
Parameters ν>p1 degrees of freedom (real)
Ψ>0, p×p scale matrix (pos. def.)
Support 𝐗 is p × p positive definite Hermitian
PDF

|Ψ|ν𝒞Γp(ν)|𝐱|(ν+p)etr(Ψ𝐱1)

𝒞Γp(ν)=π12p(p1)j=1pΓ(νj+1)
Mean Ψνp for ν>p+1
Variance see below

The complex inverse Wishart distribution is a matrix probability distribution defined on complex-valued positive-definite matrices and is the complex analog of the real inverse Wishart distribution. The complex Wishart distribution was extensively investigated by Goodman[1] while the derivation of the inverse is shown by Shaman[2] and others. It has greatest application in least squares optimization theory applied to complex valued data samples in digital radio communications systems, often related to Fourier Domain complex filtering.

Letting 𝐒p×p=j=1νGjGjH be the sample covariance of independent complex p-vectors Gj whose Hermitian covariance has complex Wishart distribution 𝐒𝒞𝒲(Σ,ν,p) with mean value Σ and ν degrees of freedom, then the pdf of 𝐗=𝐒𝟏 follows the complex inverse Wishart distribution.

Density

If 𝐒p×p is a sample from the complex Wishart distribution 𝒞𝒲(Σ,ν,p) such that, in the simplest case, νp and |𝐒|>0 then 𝐗=𝐒1 is sampled from the inverse complex Wishart distribution 𝒞𝒲1(Ψ,ν,p) where Ψ=Σ1.

The density function of 𝐗 is

f𝐱(𝐱)=|Ψ|ν𝒞Γp(ν)|𝐱|(ν+p)etr(Ψ𝐱1)

where 𝒞Γp(ν) is the complex multivariate Gamma function

𝒞Γp(ν)=π12p(p1)j=1pΓ(νj+1)

Moments

The variances and covariances of the elements of the inverse complex Wishart distribution are shown in Shaman's paper above while Maiwald and Kraus[3] determine the 1-st through 4-th moments.

Shaman finds the first moment to be

𝐄[𝒞𝐖𝟏]=1npΨ𝟏,n>p

and, in the simplest case Ψ=𝐈p×p, given d=1np, then

𝐄[𝐯𝐞𝐜(𝒞𝐖𝟑𝟏)]=[d000d000d]

The vectorised covariance is

𝐂𝐨𝐯[𝐯𝐞𝐜(𝒞𝐖𝐩𝟏)]=b(𝐈pIp)+c𝐯𝐞𝐜I𝐩(𝐯𝐞𝐜I𝐩)T+(abc)𝐉

where 𝐉 is a p2×p2 identity matrix with ones in diagonal positions 1+(p+1)j,j=0,1,p1 and a,b,c are real constants such that for n>p+1

a=1(np)2(np1), marginal diagonal variances
b=1(np+1)(np)(np1), off-diagonal variances.
c=1(np+1)(np)2(np1), intra-diagonal covariances

For Ψ=𝐈3, we get the sparse matrix:

𝐂𝐨𝐯[𝐯𝐞𝐜(𝒞𝐖𝟑𝟏)]=[accbbbcacbbbcca]

Eigenvalue distributions

The joint distribution of the real eigenvalues of the inverse complex (and real) Wishart are found in Edelman's paper[4] who refers back to an earlier paper by James.[5] In the non-singular case, the eigenvalues of the inverse Wishart are simply the inverted values for the Wishart. Edelman also characterises the marginal distributions of the smallest and largest eigenvalues of complex and real Wishart matrices.

References

  1. Goodman, N R (1963). "Statistical Analysis Based on a Certain Multivariate Complex Gaussian Distribution: an Introduction". Ann. Math. Statist. 34 (1): 152–177. doi:10.1214/aoms/1177704250. https://projecteuclid.org/euclid.aoms/1177704250. 
  2. Shaman, Paul (1980). "The Inverted Complex Wishart Distribution and its Application to Spectral Estimation". Journal of Multivariate Analysis 10: 51–59. doi:10.1016/0047-259X(80)90081-0. 
  3. Maiwald, Dirk; Kraus, Dieter (1997). "On Moments of Complex Wishart and Complex Inverse Wishart Distributed Matrices". 1997 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing. 5. IEEE Icassp 1997. pp. 3817–3820. doi:10.1109/ICASSP.1997.604712. ISBN 0-8186-7919-0. 
  4. Edelman, Alan (October 1998). "Eigenvalues and Condition Numbers of Random Matrices". SIAM J. Matrix Anal. Appl. 9 (4): 543–560. doi:10.1137/0609045. 
  5. James, A. T. (1964). "Distributions of Matrix Variates and Latent Roots Derived from Normal Samples.". Ann. Math. Statist. 35 (2): 475–501. doi:10.1214/aoms/1177703550.