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Is there an algorithm to estimate the median, mode, skewness, and/or kurtosis of set of values, but that does NOT require storing all the values in memory at once?

I'd like to calculate the basic statistics:

  • mean: arithmetic average
  • variance: average of squared deviations from the mean
  • standard deviation: square root of the variance
  • median: value that separates larger half of the numbers from the smaller half
  • mode: most frequent value found in the set
  • skewness: tl; dr
  • kurtosis: tl; dr

The basic formulas for calculating any of these is grade-school arithmetic, and I do know them. There are many stats libraries that implement them, as well.

My problem is the large number (billions) of values in the sets I'm handling: Working in Python, I can't just make a list or hash with billions of elements. Even if I wrote this in C, billion-element arrays aren't too practical.

The data is not sorted. It's produced randomly, on-the-fly, by other processes. The size of each set is highly variable, and the sizes will not be known in advance.

I've already figured out how to handle the mean and variance pretty well, iterating through each value in the set in any order. (Actually, in my case, I take them in the order in which they're generated.) Here's the algorithm I'm using, courtesy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algorithms_for_calculating_variance#On-line_algorithm:

  • Initialize three variables: count, sum, and sum_of_squares
  • For each value:
    • Increment count.
    • Add the value to sum.
    • Add the square of the value to sum_of_squares.
  • Divide sum by count, storing as the variable mean.
  • Divide sum_of_squares by count, storing as the variable mean_of_squares.
  • Square mean, storing as square_of_mean.
  • Subtract square_of_mean from mean_of_squares, storing as variance.
  • Output mean and variance.

This "on-line" algorithm has weaknesses (e.g., accuracy problems as sum_of_squares quickly grows larger than integer range or float precision), but it basically gives me what I need, without having to store every value in each set.

But I don't know whether similar techniques exist for estimating the additional statistics (median, mode, skewness, kurtosis). I could live with a biased estimator, or even a method that compromises accuracy to a certain degree, as long as the memory required to process N values is substantially less than O(N).

Pointing me to an existing stats library will help, too, if the library has functions to calculate one or more of these operations "on-line".

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will the data be passed in sorted, and will you know in advance the number of inputs? – chillysapien Jun 29 at 15:16
Useful existing link on StackOverflow: stackoverflow.com/questions/895929/… – dmckee Jun 29 at 15:45
Is that integer data or float data? Do you have a max or min value? – stephan Jun 29 at 15:47
dmckee: I'm actually using Welford's Method for the standard deviation. But I don't see anything in that link about mode, median, kurtosis, or skewness... Am I missing something? – Ryan B. Lynch Jun 29 at 15:50
stephan: Some data sets are integers, others are floats. The population distribution is pretty close to the normal (Gaussian), so we can establish a confidence interval, but there is no hard range boundary (except x > 0, in some cases). – Ryan B. Lynch Jun 29 at 15:56
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7 Answers

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Skewness and Kurtosis

For the on-line algorithms for Skewness and Kurtosis (along the lines of the variance), see in the same wiki page here the parallel algorithms for higher-moment statistics.

Median

Median is tough without sorted data. If you know, how many data points you have, in theory you only have to partially sort, e.g. by using a selection algorithm. However, that doesn't help too much with billions of values. I would suggest using frequency counts, see the next section.

Median and Mode with Frequency Counts

If it is integers, I would count frequencies, probably cutting off the highest and lowest values beyond some value where I am sure that it is no longer relevant. For floats (or too many integers), I would probably create buckets / intervals, and then use the same approach as for integers. (Approximate) mode and median calculation than gets easy, based on the frequencies table.

Normally Distributed Random Variables

If it is normally distributed, I would use the population sample mean, variance, skewness, and kurtosis as maximum likelihood estimators for a small subset. The (on-line) algorithms to calculate those, you already now. E.g. read in a couple of hundred thousand or million datapoints, until your estimation error gets small enough. Just make sure that you pick randomly from your set (e.g. that you don't introduce a bias by picking the first 100'000 values). The same approach can also be used for estimating mode and median for the normal case (for both the sample mean is an estimator).

Further comments

All the algorithms above can be run in parallel (including many sorting and selection algorithm, e.g. QuickSort and QuickSelect), if this helps.

I have always assumed (with the exception of the section on the normal distribution) that we talk about sample moments, median, and mode, not estimators for theoretical moments given a known distribution.

In general, sampling the data (i.e. only looking at a sub-set) should be pretty successful given the amount of data, as long as all observations are realizations of the same random variable (have the same distributions) and the moments, mode and median actually exist for this distribution. The last caveat is not innocuous. For example, the mean (and all higher moments) for the Cauchy Distribution do not exist. In this case, the sample mean of a "small" sub-set might be massively off from the sample mean of the whole sample.

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+1, all good practical suggestions. Using buckets automatically gives you bounds on the median (same as the bucketsize). – j_random_hacker Jun 30 at 16:21
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chillysapien has a good point - If the data is static, you could try sorting it first. That would obviously make at least the median and mode calculations much less memory intensive.

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I clarified the question a little: The data CANNOT be stored for sorting, or for any other purpose. There are just too many data points in each set. Sorting, or even just storing, billions of values requires waaay to much memory for this application. – Ryan B. Lynch Jun 29 at 15:53
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The Wikipedia article quoted in the question contains the formulas for calcualting skewness and kurtosis on-line.

For mode - I believe - there is no way doing this on-line. Why? Assume that all values of your input are different besides the last one that duplicates a previous one. In this case you have to remember all values allready seen in the input to detect that the last value duplicates a value seen befor and makes it the most frequent one.

For median it is almost the same - up to the last input you don't know what value will become the median if all input values are different because it could be before or after the current median. If you know the length of the input, you can find the median without storing all values in memory, but you will still have to store many of them (I guess around the half) because a bad input sequence could shift the median heavily in the second half possibly making any value from the first half the median.

(Note that I am refering to exact calculation only.)

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Hi,

median and mode can't be calculated online using only constant space available. However, because median and mode are anyway more "descriptive" than "quantitative", you can estimate them e.g. by sampling the data set.

If the data is normal distributed in the long run, then you could just use your mean to estimate the median.

You can also estimate median using the following technique: establish a median estimation M[i] for every, say, 1,000,000 entries in the data stream so that M[0] is the median of the first one million entries, M[1] the median of the second one million entries etc. Then use the median of M[0]...M[k] as the median estimator. This of course saves space, and you can control how much you want to use space by "tuning" the parameter 1,000,000. This can be also generalized recursively.

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Ryan, I'm afraid you are not doing the mean and variance right... This came up a few weeks ago here. And one of the strong points of the online version (which actually goes by the name of Welford's method) is the fact that it is specially accurate and stable, see the discussion here. One of the strong points is the fact that you do not need to store the total sum or total sum of squares...

I can't think of any on-line approach to the mode and median, which seem to require considering the whole list at once. But it may very well be that a similar approach than the one for the variance and mean will work also for the skewness and kurtosis...

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Ultimately if you have no a priori parametric knowledge of the distribution I think you have to store all the values.

That said unless you are dealing with some sort of pathological situation, the remedian (Rousseuw and Bassett 1990) may well be good enough for your purposes.

Very simply it involves calculating the median of batches of medians.

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If you have billions of data points, then it's not likely that you need exact answers, as opposed to close answers. Generally, if you have billions of data points the underlying process which generates them will likely obey some kind of statistical stationarity / ergodicity / mixing property. Also it may matter whether you expect the distributions to be reasonably continuous or not.

In these circumstances, there exist algorithms for on-line, low memory, estimation of quantiles (the median is a special case of 0.5 quantile), as well as modes, if you don't need exact answers. This is an active field of statistics.

quantile estimation example: http://www.computer.org/portal/web/csdl/doi/10.1109/WSC.2006.323014

mode estimation example: Bickel DR. Robust estimators of the mode and skewness of continuous data. Computational Statistics and Data Analysis. 2002;39:153–163. doi: 10.1016/S0167-9473(01)00057-3.

These are active fields of computational statistics. You are getting into the fields where there isn't any single best exact algorithm, but a diversity of them (statistical estimators, in truth), which have different properties, assumptions and performance. It's experimental mathematics. There are probably hundreds to thousands of papers on the subject.

The final question is whether you really need skewness and kurtosis by themselves, or more likely some other parameters which may be more reliable at characterizing the probability distribution (assuming you have a probability distribution!). Are you expecting a Gaussian?

Do you have ways of cleaning/preprocessing the data to make it mostly Gaussianish? (for instance, financial transaction amounts are often somewhat Gaussian after taking logarithms). Do you expect finite standard deviations? Do you expect fat tails? Are the quantities you care about in the tails or in the bulk?

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