English

Estimating thresholding levels for random fields via Euler characteristics

Statistics Theory 2017-04-28 v1 Statistics Theory

Abstract

We introduce Lipschitz-Killing curvature (LKC) regression, a new method to produce (1α)(1-\alpha) thresholds for signal detection in random fields that does not require knowledge of the spatial correlation structure. The idea is to fit observed empirical Euler characteristics to the Gaussian kinematic formula via generalized least squares, which quickly and easily provides statistical estimates of the LKCs --- complex topological quantities that can be extremely challenging to compute, both theoretically and numerically. With these estimates, we can then make use of a powerful parametric approximation via Euler characteristics for Gaussian random fields to generate accurate (1α)(1-\alpha) thresholds and pp-values. The main features of our proposed LKC regression method are easy implementation, conceptual simplicity, and facilitated diagnostics, which we demonstrate in a variety of simulations and applications.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1704.08562,
  title  = {Estimating thresholding levels for random fields via Euler characteristics},
  author = {Robert J. Adler and Kevin Bartz and Sam C. Kou and Anthea Monod},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1704.08562},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

35 pages, 13 figures. 3 tables

R2 v1 2026-06-22T19:29:43.899Z