How simulate correlated Poisson distributions
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Pete sherer
el 7 de Oct. de 2018
Comentada: Jeff Miller
el 17 de Oct. de 2018
Hi Is there a way to simulate correlated RVs where each RV follows poisson distribution? I have 2 RVs X1 and X2, and both follow Poisson distribution. I would like simulate final results such that I can control correlation between X1 and X2. Either simulating straight correlated process or post-processing of 2 independent run would work.
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Bruno Luong
el 7 de Oct. de 2018
Editada: Bruno Luong
el 8 de Oct. de 2018
n = 10000;
% correlation coef of uniform distribution
% NOT of the poisson, but they are monotonically related
Xcorr = 0.6;
M12 = 2 * sin(pi * Xcorr / 6);
M = [1, M12;
M12, 1];
C = chol(M);
% expectation value(s)
lambda = 4; % scalar or vector of 1x2
Y = zeros(n,2);
L = exp(-lambda);
C = C / sqrt(2);
for r=1:n
k = zeros(1,2);
p = ones(1,2);
b = p > L;
while any(p > L)
k = k+double(b);
X = (erf(randn(1,2)*C) + 1) / 2;
p = p .* X;
b = p > L;
end
Y(r,:) = k-1;
end
hist(Y,[0:12])
corrcoef(Y)
mean(Y)
11 comentarios
Bruno Luong
el 14 de Oct. de 2018
Editada: Bruno Luong
el 14 de Oct. de 2018
No, I use the definition as I stated above, to get the poisson one must have (
- (beta -> 0)
- (alpha*beta = lambda), so alpha -> infinity
In your test, I would put beta=0.1, alpha=20, that would simulates RV similar to Poisson with lambda=2.
Más respuestas (2)
Jeff Miller
el 8 de Oct. de 2018
Editada: Jeff Miller
el 8 de Oct. de 2018
NRVs = 2;
RVs = cell(NRVs,1);
RVs{1}=Poisson(23); % The Poisson parameter is the mean
RVs{2}=Poisson(12);
TargetCorrs = [1 0.3; 0.3 1]; % Replace 0.3 with whatever correlation you want.
mymultivar = RandGen(RVs,TargetCorrs,'Adjust','NSteps',500);
r=mymultivar.Rands(10000); % r is the array of random numbers with desired marginals & correlation
Look at DemoRandGen.m for more details.
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Jeff Miller
el 15 de Oct. de 2018
No, you can't pass data, but I think you can get what you want anyway using the NegativeBinomial distribution (which I added to Cupid yesterday). Again, I refer you to Wikipedia which explains the equivalence. Here is a small script illustrating the equivalence:
alpha=4;
beta=22;
nSim=100000;
simLambda = gamrnd( alpha, beta, [nSim, 1]);
simVec= poissrnd( simLambda, [nSim, 1]);
figure; histogram(simVec)
% Equivalent negative binomial, according to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_binomial_distribution
p = 1/(1+beta);
nb = NegativeBinomial(alpha,p);
simVec2 = nb.Random([nSim,1]);
figure; histogram(simVec2);
For all values of alpha and beta that I have tried, the histograms look identical, so this might convince you of the equivalence even if the math in Wikipedia does not. I think this means you can get what you want using the NegativeBinomial, which is a regular cupid distribution.
Jeff Miller
el 16 de Oct. de 2018
Another option--just added--is to use a "List" random variable, which is defined by an arbitrary vector of discrete random values and another arbitrary vector of the probabilities of each value. You would get these values by random generation, more or less like this:
simLambda = gamrnd( alpha, beta, [nSim, 1]);
simVec= poissrnd( simLambda, [nSim, 1]);
[Xs, ~, addresses] = unique(simVec);
Counts = accumarray(addresses,1);
Ps = Counts / sum(Counts);
gpRV = List(Xs',Ps'); % Note transpose relative to unique & accumarray outputs
Now gpRV is a Cupid distribution object that you can assign to RV{1}, etc, and use with RandGen. It won't give you exactly the values in simVec, but it will give you values from the marginal distribution defined by simVec.
Pete sherer
el 17 de Oct. de 2018
2 comentarios
Jeff Miller
el 17 de Oct. de 2018
List and NegativeBinomial were both added to the repo since we started this discussion. If you just downloaded Cupid once at the beginning, you didn't get them, and you'll need to update to the latest version for these functions to be defined.
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