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Finite Sample Analysis of Stochastic System Identification

(1903.09122)
Published Mar 21, 2019 in cs.LG , cs.SY , math.OC , and stat.ML

Abstract

In this paper, we analyze the finite sample complexity of stochastic system identification using modern tools from machine learning and statistics. An unknown discrete-time linear system evolves over time under Gaussian noise without external inputs. The objective is to recover the system parameters as well as the Kalman filter gain, given a single trajectory of output measurements over a finite horizon of length $N$. Based on a subspace identification algorithm and a finite number of $N$ output samples, we provide non-asymptotic high-probability upper bounds for the system parameter estimation errors. Our analysis uses recent results from random matrix theory, self-normalized martingales and SVD robustness, in order to show that with high probability the estimation errors decrease with a rate of $1/\sqrt{N}$. Our non-asymptotic bounds not only agree with classical asymptotic results, but are also valid even when the system is marginally stable.

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