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 nonparametric bayesian lomax delegate


Nonparametric Bayesian Lomax delegate racing for survival analysis with competing risks

Neural Information Processing Systems

We propose Lomax delegate racing (LDR) to explicitly model the mechanism of survival under competing risks and to interpret how the covariates accelerate or decelerate the time to event. LDR explains non-monotonic covariate effects by racing a potentially infinite number of sub-risks, and consequently relaxes the ubiquitous proportional-hazards assumption which may be too restrictive. Moreover, LDR is naturally able to model not only censoring, but also missing event times or event types. For inference, we develop a Gibbs sampler under data augmentation for moderately sized data, along with a stochastic gradient descent maximum a posteriori inference algorithm for big data applications. Illustrative experiments are provided on both synthetic and real datasets, and comparison with various benchmark algorithms for survival analysis with competing risks demonstrates distinguished performance of LDR.


Reviews: Nonparametric Bayesian Lomax delegate racing for survival analysis with competing risks

Neural Information Processing Systems

The model has two appealing characteristics. First, it allows predictors to affect the hazard function non-linearly. Second, the non-linearity is formulated using latent "sub-events" that compete to determine when an observable event of interest will occur. This arguably makes the non-linearity more interpretable than approaches like random forests or multilayer perceptrons. Moreover, the number of sub-events is specified using a nonparameteric Bayesian model and so model complexity can adapt to the problem.


Nonparametric Bayesian Lomax delegate racing for survival analysis with competing risks

Zhang, Quan, Zhou, Mingyuan

Neural Information Processing Systems

We propose Lomax delegate racing (LDR) to explicitly model the mechanism of survival under competing risks and to interpret how the covariates accelerate or decelerate the time to event. LDR explains non-monotonic covariate effects by racing a potentially infinite number of sub-risks, and consequently relaxes the ubiquitous proportional-hazards assumption which may be too restrictive. Moreover, LDR is naturally able to model not only censoring, but also missing event times or event types. For inference, we develop a Gibbs sampler under data augmentation for moderately sized data, along with a stochastic gradient descent maximum a posteriori inference algorithm for big data applications. Illustrative experiments are provided on both synthetic and real datasets, and comparison with various benchmark algorithms for survival analysis with competing risks demonstrates distinguished performance of LDR.