Alexandre Max Maraval

LG
3papers
202citations
Novelty57%
AI Score46

3 Papers

61.1LGApr 1
Efficient and Principled Scientific Discovery through Bayesian Optimization: A Tutorial

Zhongwei Yu, Rasul Tutunov, Alexandre Max Maraval et al.

Traditional scientific discovery relies on an iterative hypothesise-experiment-refine cycle that has driven progress for centuries, but its intuitive, ad-hoc implementation often wastes resources, yields inefficient designs, and misses critical insights. This tutorial presents Bayesian Optimisation (BO), a principled probability-driven framework that formalises and automates this core scientific cycle. BO uses surrogate models (e.g., Gaussian processes) to model empirical observations as evolving hypotheses, and acquisition functions to guide experiment selection, balancing exploitation of known knowledge and exploration of uncharted domains to eliminate guesswork and manual trial-and-error. We first frame scientific discovery as an optimisation problem, then unpack BO's core components, end-to-end workflows, and real-world efficacy via case studies in catalysis, materials science, organic synthesis, and molecule discovery. We also cover critical technical extensions for scientific applications, including batched experimentation, heteroscedasticity, contextual optimisation, and human-in-the-loop integration. Tailored for a broad audience, this tutorial bridges AI advances in BO with practical natural science applications, offering tiered content to empower cross-disciplinary researchers to design more efficient experiments and accelerate principled scientific discovery.

LGDec 7, 2020Code
HEBO Pushing The Limits of Sample-Efficient Hyperparameter Optimisation

Alexander I. Cowen-Rivers, Wenlong Lyu, Rasul Tutunov et al.

In this work we rigorously analyse assumptions inherent to black-box optimisation hyper-parameter tuning tasks. Our results on the Bayesmark benchmark indicate that heteroscedasticity and non-stationarity pose significant challenges for black-box optimisers. Based on these findings, we propose a Heteroscedastic and Evolutionary Bayesian Optimisation solver (HEBO). HEBO performs non-linear input and output warping, admits exact marginal log-likelihood optimisation and is robust to the values of learned parameters. We demonstrate HEBO's empirical efficacy on the NeurIPS 2020 Black-Box Optimisation challenge, where HEBO placed first. Upon further analysis, we observe that HEBO significantly outperforms existing black-box optimisers on 108 machine learning hyperparameter tuning tasks comprising the Bayesmark benchmark. Our findings indicate that the majority of hyper-parameter tuning tasks exhibit heteroscedasticity and non-stationarity, multi-objective acquisition ensembles with Pareto front solutions improve queried configurations, and robust acquisition maximisers afford empirical advantages relative to their non-robust counterparts. We hope these findings may serve as guiding principles for practitioners of Bayesian optimisation. All code is made available at https://github.com/huawei-noah/HEBO.

LGJun 7, 2021
High-Dimensional Bayesian Optimisation with Variational Autoencoders and Deep Metric Learning

Antoine Grosnit, Rasul Tutunov, Alexandre Max Maraval et al.

We introduce a method combining variational autoencoders (VAEs) and deep metric learning to perform Bayesian optimisation (BO) over high-dimensional and structured input spaces. By adapting ideas from deep metric learning, we use label guidance from the blackbox function to structure the VAE latent space, facilitating the Gaussian process fit and yielding improved BO performance. Importantly for BO problem settings, our method operates in semi-supervised regimes where only few labelled data points are available. We run experiments on three real-world tasks, achieving state-of-the-art results on the penalised logP molecule generation benchmark using just 3% of the labelled data required by previous approaches. As a theoretical contribution, we present a proof of vanishing regret for VAE BO.