Abstract

Many Bayesian inference problems involve target distributions whose density functions are computationally expensive to evaluate. Replacing the target density with a local approximation based on a small number of carefully chosen density evaluations can significantly reduce the computational expense of Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) sampling. Moreover, continual refinement of the local approximation can guarantee asymptotically exact sampling. We devise a new strategy for balancing the decay rate of the bias due to the approximation with that of the MCMC variance. We prove that the error of the resulting local approximation MCMC (LA-MCMC) algorithm decays at roughly the expected $$1/\sqrt{T}$$ rate, and we demonstrate this rate numerically. We also introduce an algorithmic parameter that guarantees convergence given very weak tail bounds, significantly strengthening previous convergence results. Finally, we apply LA-MCMC to a computationally intensive Bayesian inverse problem arising in groundwater hydrology.

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