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The principle of minimum cross-entropy (minimum directed divergence, minimum discrimination information, minimum relative entropy) is summarized, discussed, and applied to the classical problem of estimating power spectra given values of the autocorrelation function. This new method differs from previous methods in its explicit inclusion of a prior estimate of the power spectrum, and it reduces to maximum entropy spectral analysis as a special case. The prior estimate can be viewed as a means of shaping the spectral estimator. Cross-entropy minimization yields a family of shaped spectral estimators consistent with known autocorrelations. Results are derived in two equivalent ways: once by minimizing the cross-entropy of underlying probability densities, and once by arguments concerning the cross-entropy between the input and output of linear filters. Several example minimum cross-entropy spectra are included.
John E. Shore (Wed,) studied this question.