scholarly journals Bayesian Network Structure Learning with Integer Programming: Polytopes, Facets and Complexity

2017 ◽  
Vol 58 ◽  
pp. 185-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Cussens ◽  
Matti Järvisalo ◽  
Janne H. Korhonen ◽  
Mark Bartlett

The challenging task of learning structures of probabilistic graphical models is an important problem within modern AI research. Recent years have witnessed several major algorithmic advances in structure learning for Bayesian networks - arguably the most central class of graphical models - especially in what is known as the score-based setting. A successful generic approach to optimal Bayesian network structure learning (BNSL), based on integer programming (IP), is implemented in the GOBNILP system. Despite the recent algorithmic advances, current understanding of foundational aspects underlying the IP based approach to BNSL is still somewhat lacking. Understanding fundamental aspects of cutting planes and the related separation problem is important not only from a purely theoretical perspective, but also since it holds out the promise of further improving the efficiency of state-of-the-art approaches to solving BNSL exactly. In this paper, we make several theoretical contributions towards these goals: (i) we study the computational complexity of the separation problem, proving that the problem is NP-hard; (ii) we formalise and analyse the relationship between three key polytopes underlying the IP-based approach to BNSL; (iii) we study the facets of the three polytopes both from the theoretical and practical perspective, providing, via exhaustive computation, a complete enumeration of facets for low-dimensional family-variable polytopes; and, furthermore, (iv) we establish a tight connection of the BNSL problem to the acyclic subgraph problem.

Author(s):  
James Cussens ◽  
Matti Järvisalo ◽  
Janne H. Korhonen ◽  
Mark Bartlett

Developing accurate algorithms for learning structures of probabilistic graphical models is an important problem within modern AI research. Here we focus on score-based structure learning for Bayesian networks as arguably the most central class of graphical models. A successful generic approach to optimal Bayesian network structure learning (BNSL), based on integer programming (IP), is implemented in the Gobnilp system. Despite the recent algorithmic advances, current understanding of foundational aspects underlying the IP based approach to BNSL is still somewhat lacking. In this paper, we provide theoretical contributions towards understanding fundamental aspects of cutting planes and the related separation problem in this context, ranging from NP-hardness results to analysis of polytopes and the related facets in connection to BNSL.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document