Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Publication
    Inferring structure in bipartite networks using the latent block model and exact ICL
    (Cambridge University Press, 2017-02-01) ; ;
    We consider the task of simultaneous clustering of the two node sets involved in a bipartite network. The approach we adopt is based on use of the exact integrated complete likelihood for the latent blockmodel. Using this allows one to infer the number of clusters as well as cluster memberships using a greedy search. This gives a model-based clustering of the node sets. Experiments on simulated bipartite network data show that the greedy search approach is vastly more scalable than competing Markov chain Monte Carlo-based methods. Application to a number of real observed bipartite networks demonstrate the algorithms discussed.
      465Scopus© Citations 22
  • Publication
    Bayesian variable selection for latent class analysis using a collapsed Gibbs sampler
    Latent class analysis is used to perform model based clustering for multivariate categorical responses. Selection of the variables most relevant for clustering is an important task which can affect the quality of clustering considerably. This work considers a Bayesian approach for selecting the number of clusters and the best clustering variables. The main idea is to reformulate the problem of group and variable selection as a probabilistically driven search over a large discrete space using Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) methods. Both selection tasks are carried out simultaneously using an MCMC approach based on a collapsed Gibbs sampling method, whereby several model parameters are integrated from the model, substantially improving computational performance. Post-hoc procedures for parameter and uncertainty estimation are outlined. The approach is tested on simulated and real data.
    Scopus© Citations 17  408
  • Publication
    Bayesian model selection for the latent position cluster model for Social Networks
    (Cambridge University Press, 2017-03) ; ;
    The latent position cluster model is a popular model for the statistical analysis of network data. This model assumes that there is an underlying latent space in which the actors follow a finite mixture distribution. Moreover, actors which are close in this latent space are more likely to be tied by an edge. This is an appealing approach since it allows the model to cluster actors which consequently provides the practitioner with useful qualitative information. However, exploring the uncertainty in the number of underlying latent components in the mixture distribution is a complex task. The current state-of-the-art is to use an approximate form of BIC for this purpose, where an approximation of the log-likelihood is used instead of the true log-likelihood which is unavailable. The main contribution of this paper is to show that through the use of conjugate prior distributions, it is possible to analytically integrate out almost all of the model parameters, leaving a posterior distribution which depends on the allocation vector of the mixture model. This enables posterior inference over the number of components in the latent mixture distribution without using trans-dimensional MCMC algorithms such as reversible jump MCMC. Our approach is compared with the state-of-the-art latentnet (Krivitsky & Handcock, 2015) and VBLPCM (Salter-Townshend & Murphy, 2013) packages.
      316Scopus© Citations 6