Détail du document
Identifiant

oai:arXiv.org:2407.02010

Sujet
Statistics - Machine Learning Computer Science - Machine Learnin...
Auteur
Li, Jingyuan Liu, Wei
Catégorie

Computer Science

Année

2024

Date de référencement

10/07/2024

Mots clés
method feynman-kac operator model
Métrique

Résumé

The Feynman-Kac Operator Expectation Estimator (FKEE) is an innovative method for estimating the target Mathematical Expectation $\mathbb{E}_{X\sim P}[f(X)]$ without relying on a large number of samples, in contrast to the commonly used Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) Expectation Estimator.

FKEE comprises diffusion bridge models and approximation of the Feynman-Kac operator.

The key idea is to use the solution to the Feynmann-Kac equation at the initial time $u(x_0,0)=\mathbb{E}[f(X_T)|X_0=x_0]$.

We use Physically Informed Neural Networks (PINN) to approximate the Feynman-Kac operator, which enables the incorporation of diffusion bridge models into the expectation estimator and significantly improves the efficiency of using data while substantially reducing the variance.

Diffusion Bridge Model is a more general MCMC method.

In order to incorporate extensive MCMC algorithms, we propose a new diffusion bridge model based on the Minimum Wasserstein distance.

This diffusion bridge model is universal and reduces the training time of the PINN.

FKEE also reduces the adverse impact of the curse of dimensionality and weakens the assumptions on the distribution of $X$ and performance function $f$ in the general MCMC expectation estimator.

The theoretical properties of this universal diffusion bridge model are also shown.

Finally, we demonstrate the advantages and potential applications of this method through various concrete experiments, including the challenging task of approximating the partition function in the random graph model such as the Ising model.

Li, Jingyuan,Liu, Wei, 2024, Feynman-Kac Operator Expectation Estimator

Document

Ouvrir

Partager

Source

Articles recommandés par ES/IODE IA

Diabetes and obesity: the role of stress in the development of cancer
stress diabetes mellitus obesity cancer non-communicable chronic disease stress diabetes obesity patients cause cancer