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Research at the Decision Making Lab Fabio Cozman Universidade de São Paulo.

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Presentation on theme: "Research at the Decision Making Lab Fabio Cozman Universidade de São Paulo."— Presentation transcript:

1 Research at the Decision Making Lab Fabio Cozman Universidade de São Paulo

2 Decision Making Lab (2002)

3 Research tree Robotics (a bit) Bayes nets Sets of probabilities Algorithms independence Applications MDPs, robustness analysis, auctions Anytime, anyspace (embedded systems) Classification Applications Medical decisions MCMC algorithms inference & testing

4 Some (bio)robotics

5 Bayesian networks

6 Decisions in medical domains (with the University Hospital) Idea: To improve decisions at medical posts in urban, poor areas We are building networks that represent cardiac arrest — can be caused by stress, cardiac problems, respiratory problems, etc – Support by FAPESP

7 The HU-network

8 A better interface for teaching

9 Embedded Bayesian networks Challenge: to implement inference algorithms compactly and efficiently Real challenge: to develop anytime anyspace inference algorithms Idea: decompose networks, apply several algorithms (UAI2002 workshop on RT) – Support by HP Labs

10 Decomposing networks How to decompose and assign algorithms to meet space and time constraints with reasonable accuracy

11 Application: Failure analysis in car-wash systems

12 The car-wash network

13 Generating random networks Problem is easy to state, hard to solve: critical properties of DAGs are not known Method based on MCMC simulation, with constraints on induced width and degree – Support by FAPESP

14 Research tree (again) Biorobotics (a bit of it) Bayes nets Sets of probabilities Algorithms independence Applications MDPs, robustness analysis, auctions Anytime, anyspace (embedded systems) Classification Applications Medical decisions MCMC algorithms inference & testing

15 Bayesian network classifiers Goal is to use probabilistic models for classification – to “learn” classifiers using labeled and unlabeled data Work with Ira Cohen, Alex Bronstein and Marsha Duro (UIUC and HP Labs)

16 Using Bayesian networks to learn from labeled and unlabeled data Suppose we want to classify events based on observations; we have recorded data that are sometimes labeled and sometimes unlabeled What is the value of unlabeled data?

17 The Naïve Bayes classifier A Bayesian-network like classifier with excellent credentials: Use Bayes rule to get classification p(label | attrs.)  p(label)  i=0…N p(attr. i | Class) Attribute 1 Class Attribute 2Attribute N

18 The TAN classifier Attribute N X N Attribute 1 X 1 Class Attribute 2 X 2 Attribute 3 X 3

19 Now, let’s consider unlabeled data Our database: – Americanbaseballhamburger – Brazilian soccerrice and beans – Americangolfapple pie – ?saloon soccerrice and beans – ?golfrice and beans Question: How to use the unlabeled data?

20 Unlabeled data can help… Learning a Naïve Bayes for data generated from a Naïve Bayes model (10 attributes):

21 … but unlabeled data may degrade performance! Surprising fact: more data may not help; more data may hurt

22 Some math: asymptotic analysis Asymptotic bias: Variance decreases with more data

23 A very simple example Consider the following situation: Class X Y X Y “Real” “Assumed” X and Y are Gaussian given Class

24 Effect of unlabeled data – a different perspective

25 Searching for structures Previous tests suggest that we should pay attention to modeling assumptions when dealing with unlabeled data In the context of Bayesian network classifiers, we must look for structures This is not easy; worse, existing algorithms do not focus on classification

26 Stochastic Structure Search (SSS) Idea: search for structures using classification error Hard: search space is too messy Solution: Metropolis-Hastings sampling with underlying measure proportional to 1/p error

27 Some classification results

28 Some words on unlabeled data Unlabeled data can improve performance, can degrade performance — really hard! Current understanding about this problem is shaky – people think outliers or mismatches between labeled and unlabeled data cause the problem

29 Research tree (once again) Biorobotics (a bit of it) Bayes nets Sets of probabilities Algorithms independence Applications MDPs, robustness analysis, auctions Anytime, anyspace (embedded systems) Classification Applications Medical decisions MCMC algorithms inference & testing

30 Sets of probabilities Instead of probability of rain is 0.2, say probability of rain is [0.1, 0.3] Instead of expected value of stock is 10, admit expected value of stock is [0, 1000]

31 An example Consider a set of probabilities p(  1 ) p(  2 ), p(  3 ) Set of probabilities

32 Why? More realistic and quite expressive as representation language Excellent tool for – robustness/sensitivity analysis – modeling incomplete beliefs (probabilistic logic) – group decision-making – analysis of economic interactions – for example, to study arbitrage and design auctions

33 What we have been doing Trying to formalize and apply “interval” reasoning, particularly independence Building algorithms for manipulation of these intervals and sets – To deal with independence and networks – JavaBayes is the only available software that can deal with this (to some extent!)

34 Credal networks Using graphical models to represent sets of joint probabilities Question: what do the networks represent? Several open questions and need for algorithms Family In?Dog Sick? Lights On? Dog Barking? Dog Out?

35 Concluding To summarize, we want to understand how to use probabilities in AI, and then we add a bit of robotics Support from FAPESP and HP Labs has been generous Visit the lab in your next trip to São Paulo


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