A new nonparametric approach for system identification has been recently
proposed where the impulse response is modeled as the realization of a
zero-mean Gaussian process whose covariance (kernel) has to be estimated from
data. In this scheme, quality of the estimates crucially depends on the
parametrization of the covariance of the Gaussian process. A family of kernels
that have been shown to be particularly effective in the system identification
framework is the family of Diagonal/Correlated (DC) kernels. Maximum entropy
properties of a related family of kernels, the Tuned/Correlated (TC) kernels,
have been recently pointed out in the literature. In this paper we show that
maximum entropy properties indeed extend to the whole family of DC kernels. The
maximum entropy interpretation can be exploited in conjunction with results on
matrix completion problems in the graphical models literature to shed light on
the structure of the DC kernel. In particular, we prove that the DC kernel
admits a closed-form factorization, inverse and determinant. These results can
be exploited both to improve the numerical stability and to reduce the
computational complexity associated with the computation of the DC estimator.Comment: Extends results of 2014 IEEE MSC Conference Proceedings
(arXiv:1406.5706