Delayed Sampling and Automatic Rao-Blackwellization of Probabilistic Programs
This is an incremental improvement for probabilistic programming practitioners, enabling more efficient inference in models with conjugate priors.
The paper tackles the problem of variance reduction in Monte Carlo estimators for probabilistic programs by introducing a dynamic mechanism that delays sampling and automatically marginalizes analytically-tractable substructures, resulting in significantly reduced variance in marginal likelihood estimates across examples including a dengue outbreak model.
We introduce a dynamic mechanism for the solution of analytically-tractable substructure in probabilistic programs, using conjugate priors and affine transformations to reduce variance in Monte Carlo estimators. For inference with Sequential Monte Carlo, this automatically yields improvements such as locally-optimal proposals and Rao-Blackwellization. The mechanism maintains a directed graph alongside the running program that evolves dynamically as operations are triggered upon it. Nodes of the graph represent random variables, edges the analytically-tractable relationships between them. Random variables remain in the graph for as long as possible, to be sampled only when they are used by the program in a way that cannot be resolved analytically. In the meantime, they are conditioned on as many observations as possible. We demonstrate the mechanism with a few pedagogical examples, as well as a linear-nonlinear state-space model with simulated data, and an epidemiological model with real data of a dengue outbreak in Micronesia. In all cases one or more variables are automatically marginalized out to significantly reduce variance in estimates of the marginal likelihood, in the final case facilitating a random-weight or pseudo-marginal-type importance sampler for parameter estimation. We have implemented the approach in Anglican and a new probabilistic programming language called Birch.