JMLR 2013
Bayesian Canonical Correlation Analysis
Abstract
Mean-field variational methods are widely used for approximate posterior inference in many probabilistic models. In a typical application, mean-field methods approximately compute the posterior with a coordinate-ascent optimization algorithm. When the model is conditionally conjugate, the coordinate updates are easily derived and in closed form. However, many models of interest---like the correlated topic model and Bayesian logistic regression---are nonconjugate. In these models, mean-field methods cannot be directly applied and practitioners have had to develop variational algorithms on a case-by-case basis. In this paper, we develop two generic methods for nonconjugate models, Laplace variational inference and delta method variational inference. Our methods have several advantages: they allow for easily derived variational algorithms with a wide class of nonconjugate models; they extend and unify some of the existing algorithms that have been derived for specific models; and they work well on real-world data sets. We studied our methods on the correlated topic model, Bayesian logistic regression, and hierarchical Bayesian logistic regression. [abs] [ pdf ][ bib ] © JMLR 2013. ( edit, beta )
Authors
Keywords
No keywords are indexed for this paper.
Context
- Venue
- Journal of Machine Learning Research
- Archive span
- 2000-2026
- Indexed papers
- 4180
- Paper id
- 842637109550416684