MLLGNov 2, 2025

Hyper Hawkes Processes: Interpretable Models of Marked Temporal Point Processes

arXiv:2511.01096v1h-index: 18
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of balancing accuracy and explainability in event data modeling for researchers and practitioners, representing a novel hybrid approach rather than an incremental improvement.

The authors tackled the trade-off between interpretability and predictive performance in marked temporal point process models by introducing the hyper Hawkes process, which achieves state-of-the-art performance across benchmarks while retaining interpretable aspects.

Foundational marked temporal point process (MTPP) models, such as the Hawkes process, often use inexpressive model families in order to offer interpretable parameterizations of event data. On the other hand, neural MTPPs models forego this interpretability in favor of absolute predictive performance. In this work, we present a new family MTPP models: the hyper Hawkes process (HHP), which aims to be as flexible and performant as neural MTPPs, while retaining interpretable aspects. To achieve this, the HHP extends the classical Hawkes process to increase its expressivity by first expanding the dimension of the process into a latent space, and then introducing a hypernetwork to allow time- and data-dependent dynamics. These extensions define a highly performant MTPP family, achieving state-of-the-art performance across a range of benchmark tasks and metrics. Furthermore, by retaining the linearity of the recurrence, albeit now piecewise and conditionally linear, the HHP also retains much of the structure of the original Hawkes process, which we exploit to create direct probes into how the model creates predictions. HHP models therefore offer both state-of-the-art predictions, while also providing an opportunity to ``open the box'' and inspect how predictions were generated.

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