Persistent homology of Gaussian Fields in Euclidean space

If you generate points in $\mathbb R^n$ via a process that respects a Gaussian normal distribution, then compute the persistent homology / barcodes, to my eye something fairly regular seems to be happening, with the barcodes tending towards something like a "wing" shape, fat in lower dimensions, thinning out towards dimension $n$.

Has anyone proven any theorems that describe the asymptotic "shape" of the barcodes?

Ideally I'd like a test so that I can look at some barcodes and say "that's typical of a Gaussian normal distribution".

The closest thing I've been able to find is experiments and results on the expected Euler characteristic of the persistent homology, in the references below.

http://arxiv.org/abs/1003.5175

edit:

I did a very rough computation to try and get some kind of guess as to what the distribution of barcodes should look like. So I made a very coarse estimate based on a distribution of points that is roughly locally cubical' and approximately respecting a normal distribution.

The density is given by:

$$\mu = N e^{-r^2}$$

where $r$ is the distance from the origin. Then if $\epsilon$ is the parameter for persistent homology, it appears that $H_0$ is rank approximately

$$N \int_{\sqrt{\ln(N\epsilon^{1/n})}}^\infty r^{n-1}e^{-r^2} dr$$

and $H_k$ for $k \in \{1,2,\cdots,n-1\}$ has rank approximately

$${n \choose k+1}\frac{(\sqrt{\ln(N\epsilon^{1/n}/\sqrt{k}))}^{n-2}}{4\sqrt{k}\epsilon^{1/n}}$$

These are fairly coarse estimates, and in no way rigorous. But if something like this is actually true it seems to be saying that for $N$ large and $n \geq 3$, the $H_0$ betti number tends to some asymptote (dependent on $\epsilon$), and $H_1, \cdots, H_{n-1}$ are non-trivial but small. So most of the points in the distribution are in a giant homology black hole' at the centre and persitent homology sees the thin crust around the outside.

I'd be curious if people have done other similar guestimates (or better) and if they had similar-looking results.

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I suspect Adler's work is the state of the art on marrying random fields or their ilk with persistent homology...You should bear in mind that a high-dimensional Gaussian contains almost all its mass in a thin spherical shell far from the origin. The concomitant sparsity of the samples away from the shell will manifest in the Vietoris-Rips complex. Does your wing look like what you'd get with points on a big sphere? –  Steve Huntsman Dec 4 '12 at 22:39
Presumably the cycles in the homology will predominantly sit in thin spherical layers, fairly far out on the bell-curve, so to speak. The $H_0$ classes will be on the most distant spherical shell, the $H_1$ classes next closest, then the $H_n$ classes will be in the central most spherical shell before all the homology vanishes in the core of the distribution. The main issue is the relative thickness of the shells I would imagine. –  Ryan Budney Dec 4 '12 at 23:06
I'm surprised no one has asked this yet, but: how many sample points? If you have only one sample point, the barcode is not goint to be terribly hard to describe. Perhaps by asymptotic behavior you mean "let the sample size go to infinity" at which point generically nothing survives for too long. In short, I don't see a sample size invariant answer to your question that is also interesting. What do you have in mind? –  Vidit Nanda Dec 7 '12 at 0:26
Vel, I'm not asking for a precise prediction of homology classes, but just a general prediction of the shape of the barcodes. Interpret that broadly -- it can be a request for the expected proportion of various Betti numbers, for example. Also, it doesn't have to be an asymptotic prediction -- the prediction could depend on the sample size and it's fine to say "with a sampling of N points one would expect barcodes in this range, X times out of Y", etc. –  Ryan Budney Dec 7 '12 at 1:27
If you think of a Gaussian distribution of points in $\mathbb R^n$ as something of a probabilistic version of an $n$-dimensional $0$-handle, you could think of this question as something like "persistent homology is the first instance of a probabilistic homology theory, so what are its coefficients?" –  Ryan Budney Dec 7 '12 at 1:29