LGOct 5, 2022
Towards Safe Mechanical Ventilation Treatment Using Deep Offline Reinforcement LearningFlemming Kondrup, Thomas Jiralerspong, Elaine Lau et al.
Mechanical ventilation is a key form of life support for patients with pulmonary impairment. Healthcare workers are required to continuously adjust ventilator settings for each patient, a challenging and time consuming task. Hence, it would be beneficial to develop an automated decision support tool to optimize ventilation treatment. We present DeepVent, a Conservative Q-Learning (CQL) based offline Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) agent that learns to predict the optimal ventilator parameters for a patient to promote 90 day survival. We design a clinically relevant intermediate reward that encourages continuous improvement of the patient vitals as well as addresses the challenge of sparse reward in RL. We find that DeepVent recommends ventilation parameters within safe ranges, as outlined in recent clinical trials. The CQL algorithm offers additional safety by mitigating the overestimation of the value estimates of out-of-distribution states/actions. We evaluate our agent using Fitted Q Evaluation (FQE) and demonstrate that it outperforms physicians from the MIMIC-III dataset.
LGNov 13, 2023
A Consistent Diffusion-Based Algorithm for Semi-Supervised Graph LearningThomas Bonald, Nathan de Lara
The task of semi-supervised classification aims at assigning labels to all nodes of a graph based on the labels known for a few nodes, called the seeds. One of the most popular algorithms relies on the principle of heat diffusion, where the labels of the seeds are spread by thermoconductance and the temperature of each node at equilibrium is used as a score function for each label. In this paper, we prove that this algorithm is not consistent unless the temperatures of the nodes at equilibrium are centered before scoring. This crucial step does not only make the algorithm provably consistent on a block model but brings significant performance gains on real graphs.
LGAug 27, 2020
A Consistent Diffusion-Based Algorithm for Semi-Supervised Classification on GraphsNathan de Lara, Thomas Bonald
Semi-supervised classification on graphs aims at assigning labels to all nodes of a graph based on the labels known for a few nodes, called the seeds. The most popular algorithm relies on the principle of heat diffusion, where the labels of the seeds are spread by thermo-conductance and the temperature of each node is used as a score function for each label. Using a simple block model, we prove that this algorithm is not consistent unless the temperatures of the nodes are centered before classification. We show that this simple modification of the algorithm is enough to get significant performance gains on real data.
LGDec 23, 2019
Spectral embedding of regularized block modelsNathan de Lara, Thomas Bonald
Spectral embedding is a popular technique for the representation of graph data. Several regularization techniques have been proposed to improve the quality of the embedding with respect to downstream tasks like clustering. In this paper, we explain on a simple block model the impact of the complete graph regularization, whereby a constant is added to all entries of the adjacency matrix. Specifically, we show that the regularization forces the spectral embedding to focus on the largest blocks, making the representation less sensitive to noise or outliers. We illustrate these results on both on both synthetic and real data, showing how regularization improves standard clustering scores.
LGFeb 7, 2019
Variational Recurrent Neural Networks for Graph ClassificationEdouard Pineau, Nathan de Lara
We address the problem of graph classification based only on structural information. Inspired by natural language processing techniques (NLP), our model sequentially embeds information to estimate class membership probabilities. Besides, we experiment with NLP-like variational regularization techniques, making the model predict the next node in the sequence as it reads it. We experimentally show that our model achieves state-of-the-art classification results on several standard molecular datasets. Finally, we perform a qualitative analysis and give some insights on whether the node prediction helps the model better classify graphs.
LGOct 22, 2018
A Simple Baseline Algorithm for Graph ClassificationNathan de Lara, Edouard Pineau
Graph classification has recently received a lot of attention from various fields of machine learning e.g. kernel methods, sequential modeling or graph embedding. All these approaches offer promising results with different respective strengths and weaknesses. However, most of them rely on complex mathematics and require heavy computational power to achieve their best performance. We propose a simple and fast algorithm based on the spectral decomposition of graph Laplacian to perform graph classification and get a first reference score for a dataset. We show that this method obtains competitive results compared to state-of-the-art algorithms.