Title:  FACTOR MODELS FOR HIGH-DIMENSIONAL FUNCTIONAL TIME SERIES

Abstract: I will give a brief overview of some of my past work in functional data analysis, inspired by or applied to phonetics and neuroimaging.
I will then present some recent work, in which we setup the theoretical foundations for a high-dimensional functional factor model approach in the analysis of large cross-sections (panels) of functional time series (FTS). We first establish a representation result stating that, under mild assumptions on the covariance operator of the cross-section, we can represent each FTS as the sum of a common component driven by scalar factors loaded via functional loadings, and a mildly cross-correlated idiosyncratic component. Our model and theory are developed in a general Hilbert space setting that allows for mixed panels of functional and scalar time series. We then turn to the identification of the number of factors, and the estimation of the factors, their loadings, and the common components. We provide a family of information criteria for identifying the number of factors, and prove their consistency. We provide average error bounds for the estimators of the factors, loadings, and common component; our results encompass the scalar case, for which they reproduce and extend, under weaker conditions, well-established similar results. Under slightly stronger assumptions, we also provide uniform bounds for the estimators of factors, loadings, and common component, thus extending existing scalar results. Our consistency results in the asymptotic regime where the number N of series and the number T of time observations diverge thus extend to the functional context the “blessing of dimensionality” that explains the success of factor models in the analysis of high-dimensional (scalar) time series. We provide numerical illustrations that corroborate the convergence rates predicted by the theory, and provide finer understanding of the interplay between N and T for estimation purposes. We conclude with an application to forecasting mortality curves, where we demonstrate that our approach outperforms existing methods.
This is joint work with Gilles Nisol (ULB) and Marc Hallin (ULB)