Lifted inference, handling whole sets of indistinguishable objects together, is critical to the effective application of probabilistic relational models to realistic real world tasks. Recently, lifted belief propagation (LBP) has been proposed as an efficient approximate solution of this inference problem. It runs a modified BP on a lifted network where nodes have been grouped together if they have — roughly speaking — identical computation trees, the tree-structured “unrolling” of the underlying graph rooted at the nodes. In many situations, this purely syntactic criterion is too pessimistic: message errors decay along paths. Intuitively, for a long chain graph with weak edge potentials, distant nodes will send...
Lifted inference algorithms for probabilistic first-order logic frameworks such as Markov logic netw...
Representing, learning, and reasoning about knowledge are central to artificial intelligence (AI). A...
How can we tell when accounts are fake or real in a social network? And how can we tell which accoun...
Lifted inference, handling whole sets of indistinguishable objects together, is critical to the effe...
Many AI applications need to explicitly represent relational structure as well as handle uncertainty...
Judging by the increasing impact of machine learning on large-scale data analysis in the last decade...
Lifted belief propagation (LBP) can be extremely fast at computing approximate marginal probability ...
Lifted message passing approaches can be extremely fast at computing approximate marginal probabilit...
By handling whole sets of indistinguishable objects together, lifted belief propagation approaches h...
By handling whole sets of indistinguishable objects together, lifted belief propagation approaches h...
Lifted first-order probabilistic inference, which manipulates first-order representations of graphic...
Lifting can greatly reduce the cost of inference on first-order probabilistic graphical models, but ...
Lifted message passing algorithms exploit repeated structure within a given graphical model to answe...
Judging by the increasing impact of machine learning on large-scale data analysis in the last decade...
Probabilistic inference in Bayesian networks, and even reasoning within error bounds are known to be...
Lifted inference algorithms for probabilistic first-order logic frameworks such as Markov logic netw...
Representing, learning, and reasoning about knowledge are central to artificial intelligence (AI). A...
How can we tell when accounts are fake or real in a social network? And how can we tell which accoun...
Lifted inference, handling whole sets of indistinguishable objects together, is critical to the effe...
Many AI applications need to explicitly represent relational structure as well as handle uncertainty...
Judging by the increasing impact of machine learning on large-scale data analysis in the last decade...
Lifted belief propagation (LBP) can be extremely fast at computing approximate marginal probability ...
Lifted message passing approaches can be extremely fast at computing approximate marginal probabilit...
By handling whole sets of indistinguishable objects together, lifted belief propagation approaches h...
By handling whole sets of indistinguishable objects together, lifted belief propagation approaches h...
Lifted first-order probabilistic inference, which manipulates first-order representations of graphic...
Lifting can greatly reduce the cost of inference on first-order probabilistic graphical models, but ...
Lifted message passing algorithms exploit repeated structure within a given graphical model to answe...
Judging by the increasing impact of machine learning on large-scale data analysis in the last decade...
Probabilistic inference in Bayesian networks, and even reasoning within error bounds are known to be...
Lifted inference algorithms for probabilistic first-order logic frameworks such as Markov logic netw...
Representing, learning, and reasoning about knowledge are central to artificial intelligence (AI). A...
How can we tell when accounts are fake or real in a social network? And how can we tell which accoun...