Data processing inequality

The data processing inequality is an information theoretic concept that states that the information content of a signal cannot be increased via a local physical operation. This can be expressed concisely as 'post-processing cannot increase information'.[1]

Statement

Let three random variables form the Markov chain X Y Z {\displaystyle X\rightarrow Y\rightarrow Z} , implying that the conditional distribution of Z {\displaystyle Z} depends only on Y {\displaystyle Y} and is conditionally independent of X {\displaystyle X} . Specifically, we have such a Markov chain if the joint probability mass function can be written as

p ( x , y , z ) = p ( x ) p ( y | x ) p ( z | y ) = p ( y ) p ( x | y ) p ( z | y ) {\displaystyle p(x,y,z)=p(x)p(y|x)p(z|y)=p(y)p(x|y)p(z|y)}

In this setting, no processing of Y {\displaystyle Y} , deterministic or random, can increase the information that Y {\displaystyle Y} contains about X {\displaystyle X} . Using the mutual information, this can be written as :

I ( X ; Y ) I ( X ; Z ) , {\displaystyle I(X;Y)\geqslant I(X;Z),}

with the equality I ( X ; Y ) = I ( X ; Z ) {\displaystyle I(X;Y)=I(X;Z)} if and only if I ( X ; Y Z ) = 0 {\displaystyle I(X;Y\mid Z)=0} . That is, Z {\displaystyle Z} and Y {\displaystyle Y} contain the same information about X {\displaystyle X} , and X Z Y {\displaystyle X\rightarrow Z\rightarrow Y} also forms a Markov chain.[2]

Proof

One can apply the chain rule for mutual information to obtain two different decompositions of I ( X ; Y , Z ) {\displaystyle I(X;Y,Z)} :

I ( X ; Z ) + I ( X ; Y Z ) = I ( X ; Y , Z ) = I ( X ; Y ) + I ( X ; Z Y ) {\displaystyle I(X;Z)+I(X;Y\mid Z)=I(X;Y,Z)=I(X;Y)+I(X;Z\mid Y)}

By the relationship X Y Z {\displaystyle X\rightarrow Y\rightarrow Z} , we know that X {\displaystyle X} and Z {\displaystyle Z} are conditionally independent, given Y {\displaystyle Y} , which means the conditional mutual information, I ( X ; Z Y ) = 0 {\displaystyle I(X;Z\mid Y)=0} . The data processing inequality then follows from the non-negativity of I ( X ; Y Z ) 0 {\displaystyle I(X;Y\mid Z)\geq 0} .

See also

References

  1. ^ Beaudry, Normand (2012), "An intuitive proof of the data processing inequality", Quantum Information & Computation, 12 (5–6): 432–441, arXiv:1107.0740, Bibcode:2011arXiv1107.0740B, doi:10.26421/QIC12.5-6-4, S2CID 9531510
  2. ^ Cover; Thomas (2012). Elements of information theory. John Wiley & Sons.

External links

  • http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Mutual_information


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