15,668 research outputs found
Efficient computational strategies to learn the structure of probabilistic graphical models of cumulative phenomena
Structural learning of Bayesian Networks (BNs) is a NP-hard problem, which is
further complicated by many theoretical issues, such as the I-equivalence among
different structures. In this work, we focus on a specific subclass of BNs,
named Suppes-Bayes Causal Networks (SBCNs), which include specific structural
constraints based on Suppes' probabilistic causation to efficiently model
cumulative phenomena. Here we compare the performance, via extensive
simulations, of various state-of-the-art search strategies, such as local
search techniques and Genetic Algorithms, as well as of distinct regularization
methods. The assessment is performed on a large number of simulated datasets
from topologies with distinct levels of complexity, various sample size and
different rates of errors in the data. Among the main results, we show that the
introduction of Suppes' constraints dramatically improve the inference
accuracy, by reducing the solution space and providing a temporal ordering on
the variables. We also report on trade-offs among different search techniques
that can be efficiently employed in distinct experimental settings. This
manuscript is an extended version of the paper "Structural Learning of
Probabilistic Graphical Models of Cumulative Phenomena" presented at the 2018
International Conference on Computational Science
Advances in Learning Bayesian Networks of Bounded Treewidth
This work presents novel algorithms for learning Bayesian network structures
with bounded treewidth. Both exact and approximate methods are developed. The
exact method combines mixed-integer linear programming formulations for
structure learning and treewidth computation. The approximate method consists
in uniformly sampling -trees (maximal graphs of treewidth ), and
subsequently selecting, exactly or approximately, the best structure whose
moral graph is a subgraph of that -tree. Some properties of these methods
are discussed and proven. The approaches are empirically compared to each other
and to a state-of-the-art method for learning bounded treewidth structures on a
collection of public data sets with up to 100 variables. The experiments show
that our exact algorithm outperforms the state of the art, and that the
approximate approach is fairly accurate.Comment: 23 pages, 2 figures, 3 table
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