Abstract

Abstract We attempt to recover a function of unknown smoothness from noisy sampled data. We introduce a procedure, SureShrink, that suppresses noise by thresholding the empirical wavelet coefficients. The thresholding is adaptive: A threshold level is assigned to each dyadic resolution level by the principle of minimizing the Stein unbiased estimate of risk (Sure) for threshold estimates. The computational effort of the overall procedure is order N · log(N) as a function of the sample size N. SureShrink is smoothness adaptive: If the unknown function contains jumps, then the reconstruction (essentially) does also; if the unknown function has a smooth piece, then the reconstruction is (essentially) as smooth as the mother wavelet will allow. The procedure is in a sense optimally smoothness adaptive: It is near minimax simultaneously over a whole interval of the Besov scale; the size of this interval depends on the choice of mother wavelet. We know from a previous paper by the authors that traditional smoothing methods—kernels, splines, and orthogonal series estimates—even with optimal choices of the smoothing parameter, would be unable to perform in a near-minimax way over many spaces in the Besov scale. Examples of SureShrink are given. The advantages of the method are particularly evident when the underlying function has jump discontinuities on a smooth background.

Keywords

MinimaxSmoothnessWaveletMathematicsClassification of discontinuitiesSmoothingThresholdingFunction (biology)Mathematical optimizationApplied mathematicsInterval (graph theory)AlgorithmComputer scienceStatisticsArtificial intelligenceMathematical analysisImage (mathematics)Combinatorics

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Publication Info

Year
1995
Type
article
Volume
90
Issue
432
Pages
1200-1200
Citations
1661
Access
Closed

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1661
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Cite This

David L. Donoho, Iain M. Johnstone (1995). Adapting to Unknown Smoothness via Wavelet Shrinkage. Journal of the American Statistical Association , 90 (432) , 1200-1200. https://doi.org/10.2307/2291512

Identifiers

DOI
10.2307/2291512