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I often need to calculate the probability of a result from a multinomial distribution falling within some range, e.g., the maximum of the categories having an upper bound, or a lower bound for the minimum, or both.

For example, posed in a classic "balls and bins" problem style, one might ask "If 50 balls are thrown at 4 bins, with the probabilities of landing in the respective bins of {1/2, 3/8, 1/16, 1/16}, what's the probability that no bin has less than 5 balls or more than 20 balls?"

In Mathematica, one way of evaluating this would be :

Probability[Min[a, b, c, d] >= 5 && Max[a, b, c, d] <= 20, 
         {a, b, c, d} \[Distributed] MultinomialDistribution[50, {1/2, 3/8, 1/16, 1/16}]]

But, as anyone who's done such things in Mathematica knows, this will get untenable pretty quickly - the above takes 5 minutes on my loungebook. Adding categories and/or more trials explodes the time exponentially.

Sometimes the problem is even uglier:

Probability[Min[a, b, c, d] >= 11 && Max[a, b, c, d] <= 20, 
         {a, b, c, d} \[Distributed] MultinomialDistribution[40, {1/2, 3/8, 1/16, 1/16}]]

Mathematica will merrily churn along, finally returning 0, something that can be seen readily by simple inspection: you can't have at least 11 in each category with only 40 trials.

Is there a more efficient / faster way of getting such results? And the same for the multivariate hypergeometric?

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  • $\begingroup$ @Mr.Wizard: Done, though it feels strange to do so. $\endgroup$
    – ciao
    Commented Mar 25, 2015 at 6:56
  • $\begingroup$ I assume you're looking for exact methods, and not inexact faster methods such as Monte Carlo simulation or a normal approximation? I also assume you're familiar with jstor.org/stable/2347220 which provides FORTRAN code to find the distribution of the maximum value (but not the minimum value) exactly (I haven't tested the code and it may actually be slower than your method). $\endgroup$
    – user1722
    Commented May 1, 2016 at 19:29
  • $\begingroup$ @barrycarter: yes, this was for exact results. $\endgroup$
    – ciao
    Commented May 1, 2016 at 20:52

1 Answer 1

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Yes, there is!

One way to do such things more quickly:

multinomialRangedIP[n_, ps_, min_, max_] := 
 Total[PDF[MultinomialDistribution[n, ps], Permutations@#] & /@ 
   IntegerPartitions[n, {Length@ps}, Range[min, max]], 2]

Using the OP example,

multinomialRangedIP[50, N@{1/2, 3/8, 1/16, 1/16}, 5, 20]

is over 200X faster. That advantage grows as the number of trials/categories increases.

However, with large enough cases, even this becomes impractical (although it will always return a 0 result quickly for impossible configurations).

Another technique I use for larger cases:

multinomialRanged[n_, ps_, min_, max_] :=
  Module[{ups = MapIndexed[(#1/Total[ps[[First@#2 ;;]]]) &, ps], sa, lp = Length@ps, pr},

   pr[nx_, sk_, sk1_, pk_, minx_: 0, maxx_: n] := 
    Piecewise[{{0, sk < sk || sk - sk1 > maxx || sk - sk1 < minx},
      {Binomial[nx - sk1, sk - sk1]*pk^(sk - sk1)*(1 - pk)^(nx - sk),True}}];

   sa = Append[
     Table[Array[pr[n, #2 - 1, #1 - 1, ups[[k]], min, max] &, {n + 1, n + 1}], {k, 1, lp - 1}], 
     Reverse@Array[{Boole[# - 1 >= min && # - 1 <= max]} &, n + 1]];
   sa[[1]] = sa[[1, 1]];

   First@(Dot @@ sa)];

Comparing

multinomialRangedIP[60, N@{1/4, 1/4, 3/8, 1/16, 1/32, 1/32}, 5, 20] 
multinomialRanged[60, N@{1/4, 1/4, 3/8, 1/16, 1/32, 1/32}, 5, 20] 

Shows an over 100X speed advantage for multinomailRanged over multinomailRangedIP, again with the advantage increasing with increasing problem size. I have no idea how long Mathematica would take using native functionality - I ran out of patience...

There's certainly some optimization left in the latter code, e.g. the structure of the array has high density of zeroes, so time could probably be shaved with a custom Dot, but once it was fast enough for my needs, I left it as is.

The same technique in the latter can be applied to ranged probabilities for the multivariate hypergeometric:

hypergeometricRanged[n_, ps_, min_, max_] := 
  Module[{vkseq, t, prh, sa},

   vkseq = Accumulate@Prepend[ps, 0];
   t = Total@ps;

   sa = PadLeft[
     Table[If[min <= Subtract[y, x] <= max, 
       With[{sk = Subtract[y, 1], sk1 = Subtract[x, 1], vk = vkseq[[z + 1]], vk1 = vkseq[[z]]}, 
        If[(prh = Binomial[t - vk1, n - sk1]) == 0, 0, 
         Binomial[vk - vk1, sk - sk1] Binomial[t - vk, n - sk]/prh]], 
       0], {z, Length@ps - 1}, {x, n + 1}, {y, x, n + 1}]];

   sa[[1]] = sa[[1, 1]];

   sa = Append[sa, 
     Transpose[{Array[Boole[min <= n + 1 - # <= max] &, n + 1]}]];

   First@(Dot @@ sa)];

On a fairly trivial example:

hypergeometricRanged[30, {20, 20, 20, 10, 5}, 2, 12]

Probability[Min[a, b, c, d, e] >= 2 && Max[a, b, c, d, e] <= 12,
            {a, b, c, d, e} \[Distributed] 
                MultivariateHypergeometricDistribution[30, {20, 20, 20, 10, 5}]]

this was ~8500X faster, and as before, advantage grows dramatically with problem size.

N.B.: I use these in routines that call with well-formed cases, so no error checking is done - call them with really whacky things (like negative values) at your own peril (or add E/C code).

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  • $\begingroup$ @ubpdqn: Glad you find it interesting. Added MV hypergeometric function - same kinds of speed advantage. $\endgroup$
    – ciao
    Commented Mar 16, 2015 at 21:12

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