Understanding interdependency through complex information sharing
Abstract
The interactions between three or more random variables are often nontrivial, poorly understood, and yet, are paramount for future advances in fields such as network information theory, neuroscience, genetics and many others. In this work, we propose to analyze these interactions as different modes of information sharing. Towards this end, we introduce a novel axiomatic framework for decomposing the joint entropy, which characterizes the various ways in which random variables can share information. The key contribution of our framework is to distinguish between interdependencies where the information is shared redundantly, and synergistic interdependencies where the sharing structure exists in the whole but not between the parts. We show that our axioms determine unique formulas for all the terms of the proposed decomposition for a number of cases of interest. Moreover, we show how these results can be applied to several network information theory problems, providing a more intuitive understanding of their fundamental limits.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1509.04555,
title = {Understanding interdependency through complex information sharing},
author = {Fernando Rosas and Vasilis Ntranos and Christopher J. Ellison and Sofie Pollin and Marian Verhelst},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1509.04555},
year = {2016}
}
Comments
39 pages, 4 figures