Arithmetic average density fusion - Part I: Some statistic and information-theoretic results

Tiancheng Li, Yan Song, Enbin Song, Hongqi Fan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

Finite mixture such as the Gaussian mixture is a flexible and powerful probabilistic modeling tool for representing the multimodal distribution widely involved in many estimation and learning problems. The core of it is representing the target distribution by the arithmetic average (AA) of a finite number of sub-distributions which constitute a mixture. While the mixture has been widely used for single sensor filter design, it is only recent that the AA fusion demonstrates compelling performance for multi-sensor filter design. In this paper, some statistic and information-theoretic results are given on the covariance consistency, mean square error, mode-preservation capacity, and the information divergence of the AA fusion approach. In particular, based on the concept of conservative fusion, the relationship of the AA fusion with the existing conservative fusion approaches such as covariance union and covariance intersection is exposed. A suboptimal weighting approach has been proposed, which jointly with the best mixture-fit property of the AA fusion leads to a max–min optimization problem. Linear Gaussian models are considered for algorithm illustration and simulation comparison, resulting in the first-ever AA fusion-based multi-sensor Kalman filter. This is the first part of a series of papers that provide a comprehensive and thorough study of the AA fusion methodology and its application for target tracking. Extension and derivation of the AA fusion in the context of random finite set filters are provided in the consequent papers.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102199
JournalInformation Fusion
Volume104
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2024

Keywords

  • Arithmetic average fusion
  • Conservative fusion
  • Covariance intersection
  • Covariance union
  • Finite mixture model

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