Abstract

Abstract We consider the problem of estimating the covariance matrix of a random signal observed through unknown translations (modeled by cyclic shifts) and corrupted by noise. Solving this problem allows to discover low-rank structures masked by the existence of translations (which act as nuisance parameters), with direct application to principal components analysis. We assume that the underlying signal is of length $L$ and follows a standard factor model with mean zero and $r$ normally distributed factors. To recover the covariance matrix in this case, we propose to employ the second- and fourth-order shift-invariant moments of the signal known as the power spectrum and the trispectrum. We prove that they are sufficient for recovering the covariance matrix (under a certain technical condition) when $r<\sqrt{L}$. Correspondingly, we provide a polynomial-time procedure for estimating the covariance matrix from many (translated and noisy) observations, where no explicit knowledge of $r$ is required, and prove the procedure’s statistical consistency. While our results establish that covariance estimation is possible from the power spectrum and the trispectrum for low-rank covariance matrices, we prove that this is not the case for full-rank covariance matrices. We conduct numerical experiments that corroborate our theoretical findings and demonstrate the favourable performance of our algorithms in various settings, including in high levels of noise.

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