Andrew Carr

2papers

2 Papers

LGOct 1, 2019
Wasserstein Neural Processes

Andrew Carr, Jared Nielsen, David Wingate

Neural Processes (NPs) are a class of models that learn a mapping from a context set of input-output pairs to a distribution over functions. They are traditionally trained using maximum likelihood with a KL divergence regularization term. We show that there are desirable classes of problems where NPs, with this loss, fail to learn any reasonable distribution. We also show that this drawback is solved by using approximations of Wasserstein distance which calculates optimal transport distances even for distributions of disjoint support. We give experimental justification for our method and demonstrate performance. These Wasserstein Neural Processes (WNPs) maintain all of the benefits of traditional NPs while being able to approximate a new class of function mappings.

LGFeb 26, 2019
Graph Neural Processes: Towards Bayesian Graph Neural Networks

Andrew Carr, David Wingate

We introduce Graph Neural Processes (GNP), inspired by the recent work in conditional and latent neural processes. A Graph Neural Process is defined as a Conditional Neural Process that operates on arbitrary graph data. It takes features of sparsely observed context points as input, and outputs a distribution over target points. We demonstrate graph neural processes in edge imputation and discuss benefits and drawbacks of the method for other application areas. One major benefit of GNPs is the ability to quantify uncertainty in deep learning on graph structures. An additional benefit of this method is the ability to extend graph neural networks to inputs of dynamic sized graphs.