Informed total-error-minimizing priors: Interpretable cosmological parameter constraints despite complex nuisance effects
Bernardita Ried Guachalla, Dylan Britt, Daniel Gruen, Oliver Friedrich

TL;DR
This paper introduces ITEM priors, a method to improve the interpretability of cosmological parameter constraints by minimizing bias and coverage errors related to nuisance parameters, demonstrated on Dark Energy Survey data.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel approach to defining priors on nuisance parameters that ensures valid frequentist interpretation of target parameter constraints in cosmology.
Findings
ITEM priors reduce prior volume effects
They enable sharper, robust parameter constraints
Application to DES Y1 data validates effectiveness
Abstract
While Bayesian inference techniques are standard in cosmological analyses, it is common to interpret resulting parameter constraints with a frequentist intuition. This intuition can fail, for example, when marginalizing high-dimensional parameter spaces onto subsets of parameters, because of what has come to be known as projection effects or prior volume effects. We present the method of informed total-error-minimizing (ITEM) priors to address this problem. An ITEM prior is a prior distribution on a set of nuisance parameters, such as those describing astrophysical or calibration systematics, intended to enforce the validity of a frequentist interpretation of the posterior constraints derived for a set of target parameters (e.g., cosmological parameters). Our method works as follows. For a set of plausible nuisance realizations, we generate target parameter posteriors using several…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStatistical and numerical algorithms · Leadership, Behavior, and Decision-Making Studies
