Csaba Toth

LG
4papers
65citations
Novelty50%
AI Score28

4 Papers

LGMay 27, 2022
Capturing Graphs with Hypo-Elliptic Diffusions

Csaba Toth, Darrick Lee, Celia Hacker et al. · oxford

Convolutional layers within graph neural networks operate by aggregating information about local neighbourhood structures; one common way to encode such substructures is through random walks. The distribution of these random walks evolves according to a diffusion equation defined using the graph Laplacian. We extend this approach by leveraging classic mathematical results about hypo-elliptic diffusions. This results in a novel tensor-valued graph operator, which we call the hypo-elliptic graph Laplacian. We provide theoretical guarantees and efficient low-rank approximation algorithms. In particular, this gives a structured approach to capture long-range dependencies on graphs that is robust to pooling. Besides the attractive theoretical properties, our experiments show that this method competes with graph transformers on datasets requiring long-range reasoning but scales only linearly in the number of edges as opposed to quadratically in nodes.

MLNov 20, 2023
Random Fourier Signature Features

Csaba Toth, Harald Oberhauser, Zoltan Szabo

Tensor algebras give rise to one of the most powerful measures of similarity for sequences of arbitrary length called the signature kernel accompanied with attractive theoretical guarantees from stochastic analysis. Previous algorithms to compute the signature kernel scale quadratically in terms of the length and the number of the sequences. To mitigate this severe computational bottleneck, we develop a random Fourier feature-based acceleration of the signature kernel acting on the inherently non-Euclidean domain of sequences. We show uniform approximation guarantees for the proposed unbiased estimator of the signature kernel, while keeping its computation linear in the sequence length and number. In addition, combined with recent advances on tensor projections, we derive two even more scalable time series features with favourable concentration properties and computational complexity both in time and memory. Our empirical results show that the reduction in computational cost comes at a negligible price in terms of accuracy on moderate-sized datasets, and it enables one to scale to large datasets up to a million time series.

MLJun 19, 2019Code
Bayesian Learning from Sequential Data using Gaussian Processes with Signature Covariances

Csaba Toth, Harald Oberhauser

We develop a Bayesian approach to learning from sequential data by using Gaussian processes (GPs) with so-called signature kernels as covariance functions. This allows to make sequences of different length comparable and to rely on strong theoretical results from stochastic analysis. Signatures capture sequential structure with tensors that can scale unfavourably in sequence length and state space dimension. To deal with this, we introduce a sparse variational approach with inducing tensors. We then combine the resulting GP with LSTMs and GRUs to build larger models that leverage the strengths of each of these approaches and benchmark the resulting GPs on multivariate time series (TS) classification datasets. Code available at https://github.com/tgcsaba/GPSig.

LGJun 12, 2020
Seq2Tens: An Efficient Representation of Sequences by Low-Rank Tensor Projections

Csaba Toth, Patric Bonnier, Harald Oberhauser

Sequential data such as time series, video, or text can be challenging to analyse as the ordered structure gives rise to complex dependencies. At the heart of this is non-commutativity, in the sense that reordering the elements of a sequence can completely change its meaning. We use a classical mathematical object -- the tensor algebra -- to capture such dependencies. To address the innate computational complexity of high degree tensors, we use compositions of low-rank tensor projections. This yields modular and scalable building blocks for neural networks that give state-of-the-art performance on standard benchmarks such as multivariate time series classification and generative models for video.