von Mises distribution

Probability density function


The support is chosen to be [π,π] with μ = 0

Cumulative distribution function


The support is chosen to be [π,π] with μ = 0

Parameters \mu real
\kappa>0
Support x\in any interval of length 2π
PDF \frac{e^{\kappa\cos(x-\mu)}}{2\pi I_0(\kappa)}
CDF (not analytic – see text)
Mean \mu
Median \mu
Mode \mu
Variance \textrm{var}(x)=1-I_1(\kappa)/I_0(\kappa) (circular)
Entropy -\kappa\frac{I_1(\kappa)}{I_0(\kappa)}+\ln[2\pi I_0(\kappa)] (differential)
CF \frac{I_{|n|}(\kappa)}{I_0(\kappa)}e^{i n \mu}

In probability theory and directional statistics, the von Mises distribution (also known as the circular normal distribution or Tikhonov distribution) is a continuous probability distribution on the circle. It is a close approximation to the wrapped normal distribution, which is the circular analogue of the normal distribution. A freely diffusing angle \theta on a circle is a wrapped normally distributed random variable with an unwrapped variance that grows linearly in time. On the other hand, the von Mises distribution is the stationary distribution of a drift and diffusion process on the circle in a harmonic potential, i.e. with a preferred orientation.[1] The von Mises distribution is the maximum entropy distribution for a given expectation value of z=e^{i\theta}. The von Mises distribution is a special case of the von Mises–Fisher distribution on the N-dimensional sphere.

Definition

The von Mises probability density function for the angle x is given by:[2]

f(x\mid\mu,\kappa)=\frac{e^{\kappa\cos(x-\mu)}}{2\pi I_0(\kappa)}

where I0(k) is the modified Bessel function of order 0.

The parameters μ and 1/κ are analogous to μ and σ2 (the mean and variance) in the normal distribution:

The probability density can be expressed as a series of Bessel functions (see Abramowitz and Stegun §9.6.34)

 f(x\mid\mu,\kappa) = \frac{1}{2\pi}\left(1+\frac{2}{I_0(\kappa)} \sum_{j=1}^\infty I_j(\kappa) \cos[j(x-\mu)]\right)

where Ij(x) is the modified Bessel function of order j.

The cumulative distribution function is not analytic and is best found by integrating the above series. The indefinite integral of the probability density is:

\Phi(x\mid\mu,\kappa)=\int f(t\mid\mu,\kappa)\,dt =\frac{1}{2\pi}\left(x + \frac{2}{I_0(\kappa)} \sum_{j=1}^\infty I_j(\kappa) \frac{\sin[j(x-\mu)]}{j}\right).

The cumulative distribution function will be a function of the lower limit of integration x0:

F(x\mid\mu,\kappa)=\Phi(x\mid\mu,\kappa)-\Phi(x_0\mid\mu,\kappa).\,

Moments

The moments of the von Mises distribution are usually calculated as the moments of z = eix rather than the angle x itself. These moments are referred to as "circular moments". The variance calculated from these moments is referred to as the "circular variance". The one exception to this is that the "mean" usually refers to the argument of the circular mean, rather than the circular mean itself.

The nth raw moment of z is:

m_n=\langle z^n\rangle=\int_\Gamma z^n\,f(x|\mu,\kappa)\,dx
= \frac{I_{|n|}(\kappa)}{I_0(\kappa)}e^{i n \mu}

where the integral is over any interval \Gamma of length 2π. In calculating the above integral, we use the fact that zn = cos(nx) + i sin(nx) and the Bessel function identity (See Abramowitz and Stegun §9.6.19):

I_n(\kappa)=\frac{1}{\pi}\int_0^\pi e^{\kappa\cos(x)}\cos(nx)\,dx.

The mean of z  is then just

m_1= \frac{I_1(\kappa)}{I_0(\kappa)}e^{i\mu}

and the "mean" value of x is then taken to be the argument μ. This is the "average" direction of the angular random variables. The variance of z, or the circular variance of x is:

\textrm{var}(x)= 1-E[\cos(x-\mu)]
= 1-\frac{I_1(\kappa)}{I_0(\kappa)}.

Limiting behavior

In the limit of large κ the distribution becomes a normal distribution

\lim_{\kappa\rightarrow\infty}
f(x\mid\mu,\kappa)=\frac 1 {\sigma\sqrt{2\pi}} \exp\left[\dfrac{-(x-\mu)^2}{2\sigma^2}\right]

where σ2 = 1/κ. In the limit of small κ it becomes a uniform distribution:

\lim_{\kappa\rightarrow 0}f(x\mid\mu,\kappa)=\mathrm{U}(x)

where the interval for the uniform distribution U(x) is the chosen interval of length 2π.

Estimation of parameters

A series of N measurements z_n=e^{i\theta_n} drawn from a von Mises distribution may be used to estimate certain parameters of the distribution. (Borradaile, 2003) The average of the series \overline{z} is defined as

\overline{z}=\frac{1}{N}\sum_{n=1}^N z_n

and its expectation value will be just the first moment:

\langle\overline{z}\rangle=\frac{I_1(\kappa)}{I_0(\kappa)}e^{i\mu}.

In other words, \overline{z} is an unbiased estimator of the first moment. If we assume that the mean \mu lies in the interval [-\pi,\pi), then Arg(\overline{z}) will be a (biased) estimator of the mean \mu.

Viewing the z_n as a set of vectors in the complex plane, the \bar{R}^ 2 statistic is the square of the length of the averaged vector:

\bar{R}^ 2=\overline{z}\,\overline{z^*}=\left(\frac{1}{N}\sum_{n=1}^N \cos\theta_n\right)^2+\left(\frac{1}{N}\sum_{n=1}^N \sin\theta_n\right)^2

and its expectation value is:

\langle \bar{R}^2\rangle=\frac{1}{N}+\frac{N-1}{N}\,\frac{I_1(\kappa)^2}{I_0(\kappa)^2}.

In other words, the statistic

R_e^2=\frac{N}{N-1}\left(\bar{R}^2-\frac{1}{N}\right)

will be an unbiased estimator of \frac{I_1(\kappa)^2}{I_0(\kappa)^2}\, and solving the equation R_e=\frac{I_1(\kappa)}{I_0(\kappa)}\, for \kappa\, will yield a (biased) estimator of \kappa\,. In analogy to the linear case, the solution to the equation \bar{R}=\frac{I_1(\kappa)}{I_0(\kappa)}\, will yield the maximum likelihood estimate of \kappa\, and both will be equal in the limit of large N. For approximate solution to \kappa\, refer to von Mises–Fisher distribution.

Distribution of the mean

The distribution of the sample mean \overline{z} = \bar{R}e^{i\overline{\theta}} for the von Mises distribution is given by:[3]


P(\bar{R},\bar{\theta})\,d\bar{R}\,d\bar{\theta}=\frac{1}{ (2\pi I_0(\kappa))^N}\int_\Gamma \prod_{n=1}^N \left( e^{\kappa\cos(\theta_n-\mu)} d\theta_n\right) = \frac{e^{\kappa N\bar{R}\cos(\bar{\theta}-\mu)}}{I_0(\kappa)^N}\left(\frac{1}{(2\pi)^N}\int_\Gamma \prod_{n=1}^N d\theta_n\right)

where N is the number of measurements and \Gamma\, consists of intervals of 2\pi in the variables, subject to the constraint that \bar{R} and \bar{\theta} are constant, where \bar{R} is the mean resultant:


\bar{R}^2=|\bar{z}|^2= \left(\frac{1}{N}\sum_{n=1}^N \cos(\theta_n) \right)^2 + \left(\frac{1}{N}\sum_{n=1}^N \sin(\theta_n) \right)^2

and \overline{\theta} is the mean angle:


\overline{\theta}=\mathrm{Arg}(\overline{z}). \,

Note that product term in parentheses is just the distribution of the mean for a circular uniform distribution.[3]

This means that the distribution of the mean direction \mu of a von Mises distribution VM(\mu, \kappa) is a von Mises distribution VM(\mu, \bar{R}N\kappa), or, equivalently, VM(\mu, R\kappa).

Entropy

The information entropy of the Von Mises distribution is defined as:[2]

H = -\int_\Gamma f(\theta;\mu,\kappa)\,\ln(f(\theta;\mu,\kappa))\,d\theta\,

where \Gamma is any interval of length 2\pi. The logarithm of the density of the Von Mises distribution is straightforward:

\ln(f(\theta;\mu,\kappa))=-\ln(2\pi I_0(\kappa))+ \kappa \cos(\theta)\,

The characteristic function representation for the Von Mises distribution is:

f(\theta;\mu,\kappa) =\frac{1}{2\pi}\left(1+2\sum_{n=1}^\infty\phi_n\cos(n\theta)\right)

where \phi_n= I_{|n|}(\kappa)/I_0(\kappa). Substituting these expressions into the entropy integral, exchanging the order of integration and summation, and using the orthogonality of the cosines, the entropy may be written:

H = \ln(2\pi I_0(\kappa))-\kappa\phi_1 = \ln(2\pi I_0(\kappa))-\kappa\frac{I_1(\kappa)}{I_0(\kappa)}

For \kappa=0, the von Mises distribution becomes the circular uniform distribution and the entropy attains its maximum value of \ln(2\pi).

See also

References

  1. Risken, H. (1989). The Fokker–Planck Equation. Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-61530-9.
  2. 1 2 Mardia, Kantilal; Jupp, Peter E. (1999). Directional Statistics. Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-95333-3. Retrieved 2011-07-19.
  3. 1 2 Jammalamadaka, S. Rao; Sengupta, A. (2001). Topics in Circular Statistics. World Scientific Publishing Company. ISBN 978-981-02-3778-3. Retrieved 2010-03-03.

Further reading

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