Automated Construction of Sparse Bayesian Networks from Unstructured Probabilistic Models and Domain Information
📝 Original Info
- Title: Automated Construction of Sparse Bayesian Networks from Unstructured Probabilistic Models and Domain Information
- ArXiv ID: 1304.1530
- Date: 2013-04-08
- Authors: Researchers from original ArXiv paper
📝 Abstract
An algorithm for automated construction of a sparse Bayesian network given an unstructured probabilistic model and causal domain information from an expert has been developed and implemented. The goal is to obtain a network that explicitly reveals as much information regarding conditional independence as possible. The network is built incrementally adding one node at a time. The expert's information and a greedy heuristic that tries to keep the number of arcs added at each step to a minimum are used to guide the search for the next node to add. The probabilistic model is a predicate that can answer queries about independencies in the domain. In practice the model can be implemented in various ways. For example, the model could be a statistical independence test operating on empirical data or a deductive prover operating on a set of independence statements about the domain.💡 Deep Analysis
Deep Dive into Automated Construction of Sparse Bayesian Networks from Unstructured Probabilistic Models and Domain Information.An algorithm for automated construction of a sparse Bayesian network given an unstructured probabilistic model and causal domain information from an expert has been developed and implemented. The goal is to obtain a network that explicitly reveals as much information regarding conditional independence as possible. The network is built incrementally adding one node at a time. The expert’s information and a greedy heuristic that tries to keep the number of arcs added at each step to a minimum are used to guide the search for the next node to add. The probabilistic model is a predicate that can answer queries about independencies in the domain. In practice the model can be implemented in various ways. For example, the model could be a statistical independence test operating on empirical data or a deductive prover operating on a set of independence statements about the domain.