English

Estimating Unknown Sparsity in Compressed Sensing

Information Theory 2013-02-26 v2 math.IT Statistics Theory Methodology Machine Learning Statistics Theory

Abstract

In the theory of compressed sensing (CS), the sparsity ||x||_0 of the unknown signal x\in\R^p is commonly assumed to be a known parameter. However, it is typically unknown in practice. Due to the fact that many aspects of CS depend on knowing ||x||_0, it is important to estimate this parameter in a data-driven way. A second practical concern is that ||x||_0 is a highly unstable function of x. In particular, for real signals with entries not exactly equal to 0, the value ||x||_0=p is not a useful description of the effective number of coordinates. In this paper, we propose to estimate a stable measure of sparsity s(x):=||x||_1^2/||x||_2^2, which is a sharp lower bound on ||x||_0. Our estimation procedure uses only a small number of linear measurements, does not rely on any sparsity assumptions, and requires very little computation. A confidence interval for s(x) is provided, and its width is shown to have no dependence on the signal dimension p. Moreover, this result extends naturally to the matrix recovery setting, where a soft version of matrix rank can be estimated with analogous guarantees. Finally, we show that the use of randomized measurements is essential to estimating s(x). This is accomplished by proving that the minimax risk for estimating s(x) with deterministic measurements is large when n<<p.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1204.4227,
  title  = {Estimating Unknown Sparsity in Compressed Sensing},
  author = {Miles E. Lopes},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1204.4227},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

This is version 2. Many aspects of the paper have been revised. The restriction to non-negative signals has been removed. 22 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-21T20:51:48.090Z