Conjugate prior
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In Bayesian probability theory, a conjugate prior is a family of prior probability distributions which has the property that the posterior probability distribution also belongs to that family. The concept, as well as the term "conjugate prior", was introduced by Howard Raiffa and Robert Schlaifer in their work on Bayesian decision theory.[#endnote_raiffa_schlaifer] A similar concept had been discovered independently by George Alfred Barnard.[#endnote_miller]
Consider the general problem of inferring a distribution for a parameter θ given some datum or data x. From Bayes' theorem, the posterior distribution is calculated from the prior p(θ) and the likelihood function [\theta \mapsto p(x\mid\theta)\!] as
- [ p(\theta|x) = \frac . \!]
A conjugate prior is an algebraic convenience: otherwise a difficult numerical integration may be necessary.
Conjugate priors are known for several problems. See Gelman et al.[#endnote_gelman_et_al] for a catalog.
All members of the exponential family have conjugate priors.
Example
For a random variable which is a Bernoulli trial with unknown probability of success q in [0,1], the usual conjugate prior is the beta distribution with- [p(q=x) = (1-x)^ \over \Beta(\alpha,\beta)}]
If we then sample this random variable and get s successes and f failures, we have
- [P(s,f|q=x) = x^s(1-x)^f, ]
- [p(q=x|s,f) = x^(1-x)^ / \Beta(\alpha,\beta)} \over \int_^1 \left( y^(1-y)^ / \Beta(\alpha,\beta)\right) dy} = (1-x)^ \over \Beta(s+\alpha,f+\beta)} , ]
Notes
- ↑ Howard Raiffa and Robert Schlaifer. Applied Statistical Decision Theory. Division of Research, Graduate School of Business Administration, Harvard University, 1961.
- ↑ Jeff Miller et al. [Earliest Known Uses of Some of the Words of Mathematics], ["conjugate prior distributions"]. Electronic document, revision of November 13, 2005, retrieved December 2, 2005.
- ↑ Andrew Gelman, John B. Carlin, Hal S. Stern, and Donald B. Rubin. Bayesian Data Analysis, 2nd edition. CRC Press, 2003. ISBN 158488388X
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