Kent distribution

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Three points sets sampled from the Kent distribution. The mean directions are shown with arrows. The κ parameter is highest for the red set.

In directional statistics, the Kent distribution, also known as the 5-parameter Fisher–Bingham distribution (named after John T. Kent, Ronald Fisher, and Christopher Bingham), is a probability distribution on the unit sphere (2-sphere S2 in 3-space R3). It is the analogue on S2 of the bivariate normal distribution with an unconstrained covariance matrix. The Kent distribution was proposed by John T. Kent in 1982, and is used in geology as well as bioinformatics.

Definition

The probability density function f(𝐱) of the Kent distribution is given by:

f(𝐱)=1c(κ,β)exp{κγ1T𝐱+β[(γ2T𝐱)2(γ3T𝐱)2]}

where 𝐱 is a three-dimensional unit vector, ()T denotes the transpose of (), and the normalizing constant c(κ,β) is:

c(κ,β)=2πj=0Γ(j+12)Γ(j+1)β2j(12κ)2j12I2j+12(κ)

Where Iv(κ) is the modified Bessel function and Γ() is the gamma function. Note that c(0,0)=4π and c(κ,0)=4π(κ1)sinh(κ), the normalizing constant of the Von Mises–Fisher distribution.

The parameter κ (with κ>0 ) determines the concentration or spread of the distribution, while β (with 02β<κ ) determines the ellipticity of the contours of equal probability. The higher the κ and β parameters, the more concentrated and elliptical the distribution will be, respectively. Vector γ1 is the mean direction, and vectors γ2,γ3 are the major and minor axes. The latter two vectors determine the orientation of the equal probability contours on the sphere, while the first vector determines the common center of the contours. The 3×3 matrix (γ1,γ2,γ3) must be orthogonal.

Generalization to higher dimensions

The Kent distribution can be easily generalized to spheres in higher dimensions. If x is a point on the unit sphere Sp1 in p, then the density function of the p-dimensional Kent distribution is proportional to

exp{κγ1T𝐱+j=2pβj(γjT𝐱)2} ,

where j=2pβj=0 and 02|βj|<κ and the vectors {γjj=1,,p} are orthonormal. However, the normalization constant becomes very difficult to work with for p>3.

See also

References

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