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Robust Faber--Schauder approximation based on discrete observations of an antiderivative

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  • Xiyue Han
  • Alexander Schied

Abstract

We study the problem of reconstructing the Faber--Schauder coefficients of a continuous function $f$ from discrete observations of its antiderivative $F$. Our approach starts with formulating this problem through piecewise quadratic spline interpolation. We then provide a closed-form solution and an in-depth error analysis. These results lead to some surprising observations, which also throw new light on the classical topic of quadratic spline interpolation itself: They show that the well-known instabilities of this method can be located exclusively within the final generation of estimated Faber--Schauder coefficients, which suffer from non-locality and strong dependence on the initial value and the given data. By contrast, all other Faber--Schauder coefficients depend only locally on the data, are independent of the initial value, and admit uniform error bounds. We thus conclude that a robust and well-behaved estimator for our problem can be obtained by simply dropping the final-generation coefficients from the estimated Faber--Schauder coefficients.

Suggested Citation

  • Xiyue Han & Alexander Schied, 2022. "Robust Faber--Schauder approximation based on discrete observations of an antiderivative," Papers 2211.11907, arXiv.org, revised Aug 2023.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2211.11907
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Rama Cont & Purba Das, 2022. "Rough volatility: fact or artefact?," Papers 2203.13820, arXiv.org, revised Jul 2023.
    2. Jim Gatheral & Thibault Jaisson & Mathieu Rosenbaum, 2018. "Volatility is rough," Quantitative Finance, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 18(6), pages 933-949, June.
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