Metropolis-adjusted Langevin algorithm

In computational statistics, the Metropolis-adjusted Langevin algorithm (MALA) is a Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) method for obtaining random samples – sequences of random observations – from a probability distribution for which direct sampling is difficult. As the name suggests, MALA uses a combination of two mechanisms to generate the states of a random walk that has the target probability distribution as an invariant measure:

Informally, the Langevin dynamics drive the random walk towards regions of high probability in the manner of a gradient flow, while the Metropolis–Hastings accept/reject mechanism improves the mixing and convergence properties of this random walk. MALA was originally proposed by Roberts and Rosenthal in 1998,[1] and many variations and refinements have been introduced since then, e.g. the manifold variant of Girolami and Calderhead (2011).[2]

Further details

Let denote a probability density function on , one from which it is desired to draw an ensemble of independent and identically distributed samples. We consider the overdamped Langevin Itô diffusion

driven by the time derivative of a standard Brownian motion . (Note that another commonly-used normalisation for this diffusion is

which generates the same dynamics.) In the limit as , this probability distribution of approaches a stationary distribution, which is also invariant under the diffusion, which we denote . It turns out that, in fact, .

Approximate sample paths of the Langevin diffusion can be generated by many discrete-time methods. One of the simplest is the Euler–Maruyama method with a fixed time step . We set and then recursively define an approximation to the true solution by

where each is an independent draw from a multivariate normal distribution on with mean 0 and covariance matrix equal to the identity matrix. Note that is normally distributed with mean and covariance equal to times the identity matrix.

In contrast to the Euler–Maruyama method for simulating the Langevin diffusion, which always updates according to the update rule

MALA incorporates an additional step. We consider the above update rule as defining a proposal for a new state,

This proposal is accepted or rejected according to the Metropolis–Hastings algorithm: set

where

is the transition probability density from to (note that, in general ). Let be drawn from the continuous uniform distribution on the interval . If , then the proposal is accepted, and we set ; otherwise, the proposal is rejected, and we set .

The combined dynamics of the Langevin diffusion and the Metropolis–Hastings algorithm satisfy the detailed balance conditions necessary for the existence of a unique, invariant, stationary distribution . Compared to naive Metropolis–Hastings, MALA has the advantage that it usually proposes moves into regions of higher probability, which are then more likely to be accepted. On the other hand, when is strongly anisotropic (i.e. it varies much more quickly in some directions than others), it is necessary to take in order to properly capture the Langevin dynamics; the use of a positive-definite preconditioning matrix can help to alleviate this problem, by generating proposals according to

so that has mean and covariance .

References

  1. G. O. Roberts and J. S. Rosenthal (1998). "Optimal scaling of discrete approximations to Langevin diffusions". Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. 60 (1): 255268.
  2. M. Girolami and B. Calderhead (2011). "Riemann manifold Langevin and Hamiltonian Monte Carlo methods". Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series B (Statistical Methodology). 73 (2): 123214.
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