bnbp
Beta-Negative Binomial Process and Exchangeable Random Partitions for Mixed-Membership Modeling
The beta-negative binomial process (BNBP), an integer-valued stochastic process, is employed to partition a count vector into a latent random count matrix. As the marginal probability distribution of the BNBP that governs the exchangeable random partitions of grouped data has not yet been developed, current inference for the BNBP has to truncate the number of atoms of the beta process. This paper introduces an exchangeable partition probability function to explicitly describe how the BNBP clusters the data points of each group into a random number of exchangeable partitions, which are shared across all the groups. A fully collapsed Gibbs sampler is developed for the BNBP, leading to a novel nonparametric Bayesian topic model that is distinct from existing ones, with simple implementation, fast convergence, good mixing, and state-of-the-art predictive performance.
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First provide a summary of the paper, and then address the following criteria: Quality, clarity, originality and significance. This paper presents a new Bayesian nonparametric model for mixed-membership modeling of grouped data. The model is based on a Beta-Negative Binomial Process (BNBP). Whereas this stochastic process was exploited by previous work, as mentioned in the paper, there are several aspects that set this work apart. First, this work obtains an EPPF (exchangeable partition probability function), and derives the prediction rules thereon.
Beta-Negative Binomial Process and Exchangeable Random Partitions for Mixed-Membership Modeling
The beta-negative binomial process (BNBP), an integer-valued stochastic process, is employed to partition a count vector into a latent random count matrix. As the marginal probability distribution of the BNBP that governs the exchangeable random partitions of grouped data has not yet been developed, current inference for the BNBP has to truncate the number of atoms of the beta process. This paper introduces an exchangeable partition probability function to explicitly describe how the BNBP clusters the data points of each group into a random number of exchangeable partitions, which are shared across all the groups. A fully collapsed Gibbs sampler is developed for the BNBP, leading to a novel nonparametric Bayesian topic model that is distinct from existing ones, with simple implementation, fast convergence, good mixing, and state-of-the-art predictive performance.
Beta-Negative Binomial Process and Exchangeable Random Partitions for Mixed-Membership Modeling
The beta-negative binomial process (BNBP), an integer-valued stochastic process, is employed to partition a count vector into a latent random count matrix. As the marginal probability distribution of the BNBP that governs the exchangeable random partitions of grouped data has not yet been developed, current inference for the BNBP has to truncate the number of atoms of the beta process. This paper introduces an exchangeable partition probability function to explicitly describe how the BNBP clusters the data points of each group into a random number of exchangeable partitions, which are shared across all the groups. A fully collapsed Gibbs sampler is developed for the BNBP, leading to a novel nonparametric Bayesian topic model that is distinct from existing ones, with simple implementation, fast convergence, good mixing, and state-of-the-art predictive performance. Papers published at the Neural Information Processing Systems Conference.
Priors for Random Count Matrices Derived from a Family of Negative Binomial Processes
Zhou, Mingyuan, Padilla, Oscar Hernan Madrid, Scott, James G.
We define a family of probability distributions for random count matrices with a potentially unbounded number of rows and columns. The three distributions we consider are derived from the gamma-Poisson, gamma-negative binomial, and beta-negative binomial processes. Because the models lead to closed-form Gibbs sampling update equations, they are natural candidates for nonparametric Bayesian priors over count matrices. A key aspect of our analysis is the recognition that, although the random count matrices within the family are defined by a row-wise construction, their columns can be shown to be i.i.d. This fact is used to derive explicit formulas for drawing all the columns at once. Moreover, by analyzing these matrices' combinatorial structure, we describe how to sequentially construct a column-i.i.d. random count matrix one row at a time, and derive the predictive distribution of a new row count vector with previously unseen features. We describe the similarities and differences between the three priors, and argue that the greater flexibility of the gamma- and beta- negative binomial processes, especially their ability to model over-dispersed, heavy-tailed count data, makes these well suited to a wide variety of real-world applications. As an example of our framework, we construct a naive-Bayes text classifier to categorize a count vector to one of several existing random count matrices of different categories. The classifier supports an unbounded number of features, and unlike most existing methods, it does not require a predefined finite vocabulary to be shared by all the categories, and needs neither feature selection nor parameter tuning. Both the gamma- and beta- negative binomial processes are shown to significantly outperform the gamma-Poisson process for document categorization, with comparable performance to other state-of-the-art supervised text classification algorithms.
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