Difference between revisions of "Entropy, Relative Entropy, Mutual Information"
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== Entropy == | == Entropy == | ||
Definitions: | Definitions: | ||
+ | * Shannon entropy | ||
* a measure of the uncertainty of a random variable | * a measure of the uncertainty of a random variable | ||
* The entropy of a random variable is a measure of the uncertainty of the random variable | * The entropy of a random variable is a measure of the uncertainty of the random variable | ||
** it is a measure of the amount of information required on the average to describe the random variable | ** it is a measure of the amount of information required on the average to describe the random variable | ||
− | The entropy of a discrete random variable, <math>X</math>, is | + | === Desired Properties<ref>[https://towardsdatascience.com/entropy-is-a-measure-of-uncertainty-e2c000301c2c?gi=624b56e1fe17]</ref> === |
+ | # Uniform distributions have maximum uncertainty. | ||
+ | # Uncertainty is additive for independent events. | ||
+ | # Adding an outcome with zero probability has no effect. | ||
+ | # The measure of uncertainty is continuous in all its arguments. | ||
+ | # Uniform distributions with more outcomes have more uncertainty. | ||
+ | # Events have non-negative uncertainty. | ||
+ | # Events with a certain outcome have zero uncertainty. | ||
+ | # Flipping the arguments has no effect. | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Formulation === | ||
+ | The ''entropy'' of a discrete random variable, <math>X</math>, is | ||
{{NumBlk|:|<math>H\left(X\right)=-\sum_{x\in \mathcal{X}} p\left(x\right) \cdot\log_2 p\left(x\right)</math>|{{EquationRef|1}}}} | {{NumBlk|:|<math>H\left(X\right)=-\sum_{x\in \mathcal{X}} p\left(x\right) \cdot\log_2 p\left(x\right)</math>|{{EquationRef|1}}}} | ||
Line 58: | Line 70: | ||
Definition: | Definition: | ||
* a measure of the uncertainty associated with a set of variables | * a measure of the uncertainty associated with a set of variables | ||
+ | |||
+ | The ''joint entropy'' of a pair of discrete random variables <math>\left(X, Y\right)</math> with joint pmf <math>p\left(x, y\right)</math> is defined as | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{NumBlk|:|<math>H\left(X, Y\right)=-\sum_{x \in \mathcal{X}} \sum_{y \in \mathcal{Y}} p\left(x, y\right)\cdot \log_2 p\left(x, y\right)</math>|{{EquationRef|7}}}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | == References == | ||
+ | <references /> |
Latest revision as of 09:39, 9 September 2020
Contents
Definitions
Entropy
- a measure of the uncertainty of a random variable
- The entropy of a random variable is a measure of the uncertainty of the random variable
- it is a measure of the amount of information required on the average to describe the random variable
Relative Entropy
- a measure of the distance between two distributions
- a measure of the inefficiency of assuming that the distribution is when the true distribution is .
Mutual Information
- a measure of the amount of information that one random variable contains about another random variable
Entropy
Definitions:
- Shannon entropy
- a measure of the uncertainty of a random variable
- The entropy of a random variable is a measure of the uncertainty of the random variable
- it is a measure of the amount of information required on the average to describe the random variable
Desired Properties[1]
- Uniform distributions have maximum uncertainty.
- Uncertainty is additive for independent events.
- Adding an outcome with zero probability has no effect.
- The measure of uncertainty is continuous in all its arguments.
- Uniform distributions with more outcomes have more uncertainty.
- Events have non-negative uncertainty.
- Events with a certain outcome have zero uncertainty.
- Flipping the arguments has no effect.
Formulation
The entropy of a discrete random variable, , is
-
(1)
where has a probability mass function (pmf), , and an alphabet .
Expected Value
For a discrete random variable, , with probability mass function, , the expected value of is
-
(2)
For a discrete random variable, , with probability mass function, , the expected value of is
-
(3)
Consider the case where . We get
-
(4)
Lemma 1: Entropy is greater than or equal to zero
-
(5)
Proof: Since , then , and subsequently, . Thus from Eq. (4) we get .
Lemma 2: Changing the logarithm base
-
(6)
Proof:
- Given that
- And since
- We get
Note that the entropy, , has units of bits for , or nats (natural units) for , or dits (decimal digits) for .
Joint Entropy
Definition:
- a measure of the uncertainty associated with a set of variables
The joint entropy of a pair of discrete random variables with joint pmf is defined as
-
(7)