5,394 research outputs found
Non-Gaussian Discriminative Factor Models via the Max-Margin Rank-Likelihood
We consider the problem of discriminative factor analysis for data that are
in general non-Gaussian. A Bayesian model based on the ranks of the data is
proposed. We first introduce a new {\em max-margin} version of the
rank-likelihood. A discriminative factor model is then developed, integrating
the max-margin rank-likelihood and (linear) Bayesian support vector machines,
which are also built on the max-margin principle. The discriminative factor
model is further extended to the {\em nonlinear} case through mixtures of local
linear classifiers, via Dirichlet processes. Fully local conjugacy of the model
yields efficient inference with both Markov Chain Monte Carlo and variational
Bayes approaches. Extensive experiments on benchmark and real data demonstrate
superior performance of the proposed model and its potential for applications
in computational biology.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, ICML 201
Gibbs Max-margin Topic Models with Data Augmentation
Max-margin learning is a powerful approach to building classifiers and
structured output predictors. Recent work on max-margin supervised topic models
has successfully integrated it with Bayesian topic models to discover
discriminative latent semantic structures and make accurate predictions for
unseen testing data. However, the resulting learning problems are usually hard
to solve because of the non-smoothness of the margin loss. Existing approaches
to building max-margin supervised topic models rely on an iterative procedure
to solve multiple latent SVM subproblems with additional mean-field assumptions
on the desired posterior distributions. This paper presents an alternative
approach by defining a new max-margin loss. Namely, we present Gibbs max-margin
supervised topic models, a latent variable Gibbs classifier to discover hidden
topic representations for various tasks, including classification, regression
and multi-task learning. Gibbs max-margin supervised topic models minimize an
expected margin loss, which is an upper bound of the existing margin loss
derived from an expected prediction rule. By introducing augmented variables
and integrating out the Dirichlet variables analytically by conjugacy, we
develop simple Gibbs sampling algorithms with no restricting assumptions and no
need to solve SVM subproblems. Furthermore, each step of the
"augment-and-collapse" Gibbs sampling algorithms has an analytical conditional
distribution, from which samples can be easily drawn. Experimental results
demonstrate significant improvements on time efficiency. The classification
performance is also significantly improved over competitors on binary,
multi-class and multi-label classification tasks.Comment: 35 page
Learning Discriminative Bayesian Networks from High-dimensional Continuous Neuroimaging Data
Due to its causal semantics, Bayesian networks (BN) have been widely employed
to discover the underlying data relationship in exploratory studies, such as
brain research. Despite its success in modeling the probability distribution of
variables, BN is naturally a generative model, which is not necessarily
discriminative. This may cause the ignorance of subtle but critical network
changes that are of investigation values across populations. In this paper, we
propose to improve the discriminative power of BN models for continuous
variables from two different perspectives. This brings two general
discriminative learning frameworks for Gaussian Bayesian networks (GBN). In the
first framework, we employ Fisher kernel to bridge the generative models of GBN
and the discriminative classifiers of SVMs, and convert the GBN parameter
learning to Fisher kernel learning via minimizing a generalization error bound
of SVMs. In the second framework, we employ the max-margin criterion and build
it directly upon GBN models to explicitly optimize the classification
performance of the GBNs. The advantages and disadvantages of the two frameworks
are discussed and experimentally compared. Both of them demonstrate strong
power in learning discriminative parameters of GBNs for neuroimaging based
brain network analysis, as well as maintaining reasonable representation
capacity. The contributions of this paper also include a new Directed Acyclic
Graph (DAG) constraint with theoretical guarantee to ensure the graph validity
of GBN.Comment: 16 pages and 5 figures for the article (excluding appendix
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