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Approximation Complexity of Maximum A Posteriori Inference in Sum-Product Networks

Abstract

We discuss the computational complexity of approximating maximum a posteriori inference in sum-product networks. We first show \np-hardness in trees of height two by a reduction from maximum independent set; this implies non-approximability within a sublinear factor. We show that this is a tight bound, as we can find an approximation within a linear factor in networks of height two. We then show that, in trees of height three, it is NP-hard to approximate the problem within a factor 2f(n)2^{f(n)} for any sublinear function ff of the size of the input nn. Again, this bound is tight, as we prove that the usual max-product algorithm finds (in any network) approximations within factor 2cβ‹…n2^{c \cdot n} for some constant c < 1. Last, we present a simple algorithm, and show that it provably produces solutions at least as good as, and potentially much better than, the max-product algorithm. We empirically analyze the proposed algorithm against max-product using synthetic and real-world data

Similar works

This paper was published in Queen's University Belfast Research Portal.

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