Simple Matlab Random Number Generation
Show older comments
I have to get 5 random numbers a1, a2, a3, a4, a5 where each a1, a2, a3, a4, a5 should be between [-0.5, 0.5] and sum i.e. a1 + a2 + a3 + a4 + a5 = 1.
How should I do it?
4 Comments
bym
on 27 Feb 2011
I don't think the problem statement is consistent. There is some probability that you could draw [.5 .5 .5 .5 .5]
Paulo Silva
on 27 Feb 2011
Hi Sam, why "Simple Matlab Random Number Generation"? it's not that simple.
Sam Da
on 27 Feb 2011
Paulo Silva
on 28 Feb 2011
I deleted my answer (the one that was accepted but it wasn't the best one) and voted on Bruno's and Matt's answers.
Please reselect (Sam or someone who can (admins?!)) the best answer, thank you.
Accepted Answer
More Answers (2)
Bruno Luong
on 27 Feb 2011
To generate true uniform distribution, the correct method is not quite straightforward. I strongly recommend Roger Stafford's FEX,
http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/9700-random-vectors-with-fixed-sum
3 Comments
Jan
on 27 Feb 2011
This is defintely the best answer.
the cyclist
on 27 Feb 2011
Agreed that this is the definitive answer. Specifically for Sam's solution:
X = randfixedsum(5,10000,1,-0.5,0.5);
Matt Tearle
on 27 Feb 2011
Very nice!
Matt Tearle
on 27 Feb 2011
How about a brute-force approach?
ntot = 0;
n = 10000;
x = zeros(n,5);
while ntot<n
r = rand(100,4)-0.5;
r5 = 1 - sum(r,2);
idx = (r5>-0.5) & (r5<0.5);
tmp = [r(idx,:),r5(idx)];
nidx = min(size(tmp,1),n-ntot);
x(ntot+1:ntot+nidx,:) = tmp(1:nidx,:);
ntot = ntot + nidx;
end
1 Comment
the cyclist
on 28 Feb 2011
My first reaction to this solution was that, as a rejection method (with a loop, no less!), it would be much slower than Roger's method. The reality is that is does comparably well, speed-wise. I haven't done a full-blown comparison, but I think the reason is two-fold. First, you "semi-vectorized" by pulling chunks of random numbers at a time. Second, and I think more importantly, the accept/reject fraction is pretty good. (It might not be so favorable otherwise, like if the marginals were on [0,1] and still had to sum to 1.)
This solution is highly intuitive, and I believe leads to marginal distributions and correlations between summands that are identical to Roger's solution.
Categories
Find more on Uniform Distribution (Continuous) in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!