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A Proofs of the Main Results

Neural Information Processing Systems

This section describes Stein variational gradient descent (SVGD) by Liu and Wang [19]. The overview is meant as supplementary material for Section 5, where we propose to use SVGD for inferring the DiBS posteriors p(Z | D) and p(Z, Θ | D). In contrast to sampling-based MCMC or optimizationbased variational inference methods, SVGD iteratively transports a fixed set of particles to closely match a target distribution, akin to the gradient descent algorithm in optimization. We refer the reader to Liu and Wang [19] for additional details. Let p(x) with x X be a differentiable density that we want to sample from, e.g., to estimate an expectation.



A Proofs of the Main Results

Neural Information Processing Systems

Finally, let us consider (b), the general case. A.2 Proposition 2 Proof We will derive the gradients of the unnormalized posterior since In practice, we recommend the log-sum-exp trick for applying Proposition 2. Let us define Again, let us first consider case (a).



DiBS: Differentiable Bayesian Structure Learning

arXiv.org Machine Learning

Bayesian structure learning allows inferring Bayesian network structure from data while reasoning about the epistemic uncertainty -- a key element towards enabling active causal discovery and designing interventions in real world systems. In this work, we propose a general, fully differentiable framework for Bayesian structure learning (DiBS) that operates in the continuous space of a latent probabilistic graph representation. Building on recent advances in variational inference, we use DiBS to devise an efficient method for approximating posteriors over structural models. Contrary to existing work, DiBS is agnostic to the form of the local conditional distributions and allows for joint posterior inference of both the graph structure and the conditional distribution parameters. This makes our method directly applicable to posterior inference of nonstandard Bayesian network models, e.g., with nonlinear dependencies encoded by neural networks. In evaluations on simulated and real-world data, DiBS significantly outperforms related approaches to joint posterior inference.