Closed-Form Gibbs Sampling for Graphical Models with Algebraic Constraints

Authors

  • Hadi Mohasel Afshar Australian National University
  • Scott Sanner Oregon State University
  • Christfried Webers NICTA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v30i1.10419

Keywords:

MCMC, sampling, Gibbs, closed-form, deterministic

Abstract

Probabilistic inference in many real-world problems requires graphical models with deterministic algebraic constraints between random variables (e.g., Newtonian mechanics, Pascal’s law, Ohm’s law) that are known to be problematic for many inference methods such as Monte Carlo sampling. Fortunately, when such constraintsare invertible, the model can be collapsed and the constraints eliminated through the well-known Jacobian-based change of variables. As our first contributionin this work, we show that a much broader classof algebraic constraints can be collapsed by leveraging the properties of a Dirac delta model of deterministic constraints. Unfortunately, the collapsing processcan lead to highly piecewise densities that pose challenges for existing probabilistic inference tools. Thus,our second contribution to address these challenges is to present a variation of Gibbs sampling that efficiently samples from these piecewise densities. The key insight to achieve this is to introduce a class of functions that (1) is sufficiently rich to approximate arbitrary models up to arbitrary precision, (2) is closed under dimension reduction (collapsing) for models with (non)linear algebraic constraints and (3) always permits one analytical integral sufficient to automatically derive closed-form conditionals for Gibbs sampling. Experiments demonstrate the proposed sampler converges at least an order of magnitude faster than existing Monte Carlo samplers.

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Published

2016-03-05

How to Cite

Mohasel Afshar, H., Sanner, S., & Webers, C. (2016). Closed-Form Gibbs Sampling for Graphical Models with Algebraic Constraints. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 30(1). https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v30i1.10419

Issue

Section

Technical Papers: Reasoning under Uncertainty