NAG Library Routine Document
G13EBF
1 Purpose
G13EBF performs a combined measurement and time update of one iteration of the time-invariant Kalman filter using a square root covariance filter.
2 Specification
SUBROUTINE G13EBF ( |
TRANSF, N, M, L, A, LDS, B, STQ, Q, LDQ, C, LDM, R, S, K, H, U, TOL, IWK, WK, IFAIL) |
INTEGER |
N, M, L, LDS, LDQ, LDM, IWK(M), IFAIL |
REAL (KIND=nag_wp) |
A(LDS,N), B(LDS,L), Q(LDQ,*), C(LDM,N), R(LDM,M), S(LDS,N), K(LDS,M), H(LDM,M), U(LDS,*), TOL, WK((N+M)*(N+M+L)) |
LOGICAL |
STQ |
CHARACTER(1) |
TRANSF |
|
3 Description
The Kalman filter arises from the state space model given by
where
Xi is the state vector of length
n at time
i,
Yi is the observation vector of length
m at time
i and
Wi of length
l and
Vi of length
m are the independent state noise and measurement noise respectively. The matrices
A,B and
C are time invariant.
The estimate of
Xi given observations
Y1 to
Yi-1 is denoted by
X^i∣i-1 with state covariance matrix
VarX^i∣i-1=Pi∣i-1=SiSiT while the estimate of
Xi given observations
Y1 to
Yi is denoted by
X^i∣i with covariance matrix
VarX^i∣i=Pi∣i. The update of the estimate,
X^i∣i-1, from time
i to time
i+1 is computed in two stages. First, the measurement-update is given by
where
Ki=Pi∣iCTCPi∣iCT+Ri
-1 is the Kalman gain matrix. The second stage is the time-update for
X, which is given by
where
DiUi represents any deterministic control used.
The square root covariance filter algorithm provides a stable method for computing the Kalman gain matrix and the state covariance matrix. The algorithm can be summarised as
where
U is an orthogonal transformation triangularizing the left-hand pre-array to produce the right-hand post-array. The triangularization is carried out via Householder transformations exploiting the zero pattern of the pre-array. The relationship between the Kalman gain matrix
Ki and
Gi is given by
In order to exploit the invariant parts of the model to simplify the computation of
U the results for the transformed state space
U*X are computed where
U* is the transformation that reduces the matrix pair
A,C to lower observer Hessenberg form. That is, the matrix
U* is computed such that the compound matrix
is a lower trapezoidal matrix. Further the matrix
B is transformed to
U*B. These transformations need only be computed once at the start of a series, and G13EBF will, optionally, compute them. G13EBF returns transformed matrices
U*AU*T,
U*B,
CU*T and
U*AKi, the Cholesky factor of the updated transformed state covariance matrix
Si+1* (where
U*Pi+1∣iU*T=Si+1*Si+1
*T) and the matrix
Hi1/2, valid for both transformed and original models, which is used in the computation of the likelihood for the model. Note that the covariance matrices
Qi and
Ri can be time-varying.
4 References
Vanbegin M, van Dooren P and Verhaegen M H G (1989) Algorithm 675: FORTRAN subroutines for computing the square root covariance filter and square root information filter in dense or Hessenberg forms
ACM Trans. Math. Software 15 243–256
Verhaegen M H G and van Dooren P (1986) Numerical aspects of different Kalman filter implementations
IEEE Trans. Auto. Contr. AC-31 907–917
5 Parameters
- 1: TRANSF – CHARACTER(1)Input
On entry: indicates whether to transform the input matrix pair
A,C to lower observer Hessenberg form. The transformation will only be required on the first call to G13EBF.
- TRANSF='T'
- The matrices in arrays A and C are transformed to lower observer Hessenberg form and the matrices in B and S are transformed as described in Section 3.
- TRANSF='H'
- The matrices in arrays A, C and B should be as returned from a previous call to G13EBF with TRANSF='T'.
Constraint:
TRANSF='T' or 'H'.
- 2: N – INTEGERInput
On entry: n, the size of the state vector.
Constraint:
N≥1.
- 3: M – INTEGERInput
On entry: m, the size of the observation vector.
Constraint:
M≥1.
- 4: L – INTEGERInput
On entry: l, the dimension of the state noise.
Constraint:
L≥1.
- 5: A(LDS,N) – REAL (KIND=nag_wp) arrayInput/Output
On entry: if
TRANSF='T', the state transition matrix,
A.
If TRANSF='H', the transformed matrix as returned by a previous call to G13EBF with TRANSF='T'.
On exit: if
TRANSF='T', the transformed matrix,
U*AU*T, otherwise
A is unchanged.
- 6: LDS – INTEGERInput
On entry: the first dimension of the arrays
A,
B,
S,
K and
U as declared in the (sub)program from which G13EBF is called.
Constraint:
LDS≥N.
- 7: B(LDS,L) – REAL (KIND=nag_wp) arrayInput/Output
On entry: if
TRANSF='T', the noise coefficient matrix
B.
If TRANSF='H', the transformed matrix as returned by a previous call to G13EBF with TRANSF='T'.
On exit: if
TRANSF='T', the transformed matrix,
U*B, otherwise
B is unchanged.
- 8: STQ – LOGICALInput
On entry: if
STQ=.TRUE., the state noise covariance matrix
Qi is assumed to be the identity matrix. Otherwise the lower triangular Cholesky factor,
Qi1/2, must be provided in
Q.
- 9: Q(LDQ,*) – REAL (KIND=nag_wp) arrayInput
-
Note: the second dimension of the array
Q
must be at least
L if
STQ=.FALSE. and at least
1 if
STQ=.TRUE..
On entry: if
STQ=.FALSE.,
Q must contain the lower triangular Cholesky factor of the state noise covariance matrix,
Qi1/2. Otherwise
Q is not referenced.
- 10: LDQ – INTEGERInput
On entry: the first dimension of the array
Q as declared in the (sub)program from which G13EBF is called.
Constraints:
- if STQ=.FALSE., LDQ≥L;
- otherwise LDQ≥1.
- 11: C(LDM,N) – REAL (KIND=nag_wp) arrayInput/Output
On entry: if
TRANSF='T', the measurement coefficient matrix,
C.
If TRANSF='H', the transformed matrix as returned by a previous call to G13EBF with TRANSF='T'.
On exit: if
TRANSF='T', the transformed matrix,
CU*T, otherwise
C is unchanged.
- 12: LDM – INTEGERInput
On entry: the first dimension of the arrays
C,
R and
H as declared in the (sub)program from which G13EBF is called.
Constraint:
LDM≥M.
- 13: R(LDM,M) – REAL (KIND=nag_wp) arrayInput
On entry: the lower triangular Cholesky factor of the measurement noise covariance matrix Ri1/2.
- 14: S(LDS,N) – REAL (KIND=nag_wp) arrayInput/Output
On entry: if
TRANSF='T' the lower triangular Cholesky factor of the state covariance matrix,
Si.
If TRANSF='H' the lower triangular Cholesky factor of the covariance matrix of the transformed state vector Si* as returned from a previous call to G13EBF with TRANSF='T'.
On exit: the lower triangular Cholesky factor of the transformed state covariance matrix, Si+1*.
- 15: K(LDS,M) – REAL (KIND=nag_wp) arrayOutput
On exit: the Kalman gain matrix for the transformed state vector premultiplied by the state transformed transition matrix, U*AKi.
- 16: H(LDM,M) – REAL (KIND=nag_wp) arrayOutput
On exit: the lower triangular matrix Hi1/2.
- 17: U(LDS,*) – REAL (KIND=nag_wp) arrayOutput
-
Note: the second dimension of the array
U
must be at least
N if
TRANSF='T', and at least
1 otherwise.
On exit: if
TRANSF='T' the
n by
n transformation matrix
U*, otherwise
U is not referenced.
- 18: TOL – REAL (KIND=nag_wp)Input
On entry: the tolerance used to test for the singularity of
Hi1/2. If
0.0≤TOL<m2×machine precision, then
m2×machine precision is used instead. The inverse of the condition number of
H1/2 is estimated by a call to
F07TGF (DTRCON). If this estimate is less than
TOL then
H1/2 is assumed to be singular.
Suggested value:
TOL=0.0.
Constraint:
TOL≥0.0.
- 19: IWK(M) – INTEGER arrayWorkspace
- 20: WK(N+M×N+M+L) – REAL (KIND=nag_wp) arrayWorkspace
- 21: IFAIL – INTEGERInput/Output
-
On entry:
IFAIL must be set to
0,
-1 or 1. If you are unfamiliar with this parameter you should refer to
Section 3.3 in the Essential Introduction for details.
For environments where it might be inappropriate to halt program execution when an error is detected, the value
-1 or 1 is recommended. If the output of error messages is undesirable, then the value
1 is recommended. Otherwise, if you are not familiar with this parameter, the recommended value is
0.
When the value -1 or 1 is used it is essential to test the value of IFAIL on exit.
On exit:
IFAIL=0 unless the routine detects an error or a warning has been flagged (see
Section 6).
6 Error Indicators and Warnings
If on entry
IFAIL=0 or
-1, explanatory error messages are output on the current error message unit (as defined by
X04AAF).
Errors or warnings detected by the routine:
- IFAIL=1
On entry, | TRANSF≠'T' or 'H', |
or | N<1, |
or | M<1, |
or | L<1, |
or | LDS<N, |
or | LDM<M, |
or | STQ=.TRUE. and LDQ<1, |
or | STQ=.FALSE. and LDQ<L, |
or | TOL<0.0. |
- IFAIL=2
The matrix Hi1/2 is singular.
7 Accuracy
The use of the square root algorithm improves the stability of the computations as compared with the direct coding of the Kalman filter. The accuracy will depend on the model.
8 Further Comments
For models with time-varying
A,B and
C,
G13EAF can be used.
The initial estimate of the transformed state vector can be computed from the estimate of the original state vector
X^1∣0, say, by premultiplying it by
U* as returned by G13EBF with
TRANSF='T'; that is,
X^1∣0*=U*X^1∣0. The estimate of the transformed state vector
X^i+1∣i* can be computed from the previous value
X^i∣i-1* by
where
are the independent one-step prediction residuals for both the transformed and original model. The estimate of the original state vector can be computed from the transformed state vector as
U*TX^1+1∣i*. The required matrix-vector multiplications can be performed by
F06PAF (DGEMV).
If
Wi and
Vi are independent multivariate Normal variates then the log-likelihood for observations
i=1,2,…,t is given by
where
κ is a constant.
The Cholesky factors of the covariance matrices can be computed using
F07FDF (DPOTRF).
Note that the model
can be specified either with
B set to the identity matrix and
STQ=.FALSE. and the matrix
Q1/2 input in
Q or with
STQ=.TRUE. and
B set to
Q1/2.
The algorithm requires
16n3+n232m+l+2nm2+23p3 operations and is backward stable (see
Verhaegen and van Dooren (1986)). The transformation to lower observer Hessenberg form requires
On+mn2 operations.
9 Example
This example first inputs the number of updates to be computed and the problem sizes. The initial state vector and the Cholesky factor of the state covariance matrix are input followed by the model matrices
A,B,C,R1/2 and optionally
Q1/2 (the Cholesky factors of the covariance matrices being input). At the first update the matrices are transformed using the
TRANSF='T' option and the initial value of the state vector is transformed. At each update the observed values are input and the residuals are computed and printed and the estimate of the transformed state vector,
U^*Xi∣i-1, and the deviance are updated. The deviance is
-2×log-likelihood ignoring the constant. After the final update the estimate of the state vector is computed from the transformed state vector and the state covariance matrix is computed from
S and these are printed along with the value of the deviance.
The data is for a two-dimensional time series to which a VARMA
1,1 has been fitted. For the specification of a VARMA model as a state space model see the
G13 Chapter Introduction. The means of the two series are included as additional states that do not change over time. The initial value of
P,
P0, is the solution to
9.1 Program Text
Program Text (g13ebfe.f90)
9.2 Program Data
Program Data (g13ebfe.d)
9.3 Program Results
Program Results (g13ebfe.r)