MLOct 22, 2018
Properties of an N Time-Slice Dynamic Chain Event GraphRodrigo A. Collazo, Jim Q. Smith
A Dynamic Chain Event Graph (DCEG) provides a rich tree-based framework for modelling a dynamic process with highly asymmetric developments. An N Time-Slice DCEG (NT-DCEG) is a useful subclass of the DCEG class that exhibits a specific type of periodicity in its supporting tree graph and embodies a time-homogeneity assumption. Here some desired properties of an NT-DCEG is explored. In particular, we prove that the class of NT-DCEGs contains all discrete N time-slice Dynamic Bayesian Networks as special cases. We also develop a method to distributively construct an NT-DCEG model. By exploiting the topology of an NT-DCEG graph, we show how to construct intrinsic random variables which exhibit context-specific independences that can then be checked by domain experts. We also show how an NT-DCEG can be used to depict various structural and Granger causal hypotheses about a given process. Our methods are illustrated throughout using examples of dynamic multivariate processes describing inmate radicalisation in a prison.
MLAug 17, 2018
An N Time-Slice Dynamic Chain Event GraphRodrigo A. Collazo, Jim Q. Smith
The Dynamic Chain Event Graph (DCEG) is able to depict many classes of discrete random processes exhibiting asymmetries in their developments and context-specific conditional probabilities structures. However, paradoxically, this very generality has so far frustrated its wide application. So in this paper we develop an object-oriented method to fully analyse a particularly useful and feasibly implementable new subclass of these graphical models called the N Time-Slice DCEG (NT-DCEG). After demonstrating a close relationship between an NT-DCEG and a specific class of Markov processes, we discuss how graphical modellers can exploit this connection to gain a deep understanding of their processes. We also show how to read from the topology of this graph context-specific independence statements that can then be checked by domain experts. Our methods are illustrated throughout using examples of dynamic multivariate processes describing inmate radicalisation in a prison.