Abstract

Motivated by applications to Bayesian inference for statistical models with orthogonal matrix parameters, we present a general approach to Monte Carlo simulation from probability distributions on the Stiefel manifold. To bypass many of the well-established challenges of simulating from the distribution of a random orthogonal matrix we construct a distribution for an unconstrained random matrix X such that the orthogonal component of the polar decomposition of is equal in distribution to The distribution of X is amenable to Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) simulation using standard methods, and an approximation to the distribution of Q can be recovered from a Markov chain on the unconstrained space. When combined with modern MCMC software, polar expansion allows for routine and flexible posterior inference in models with orthogonal matrix parameters. We find that polar expansion with adaptive Hamiltonian Monte Carlo is an order of magnitude more efficient than competing MCMC approaches in a benchmark protein interaction network application. We also propose a new approach to Bayesian functional principal component analysis which we illustrate in a meteorological time series application. Supplementary materials for this article are available online.

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