Open Access
2009 Building hyper Dirichlet processes for graphical models
Daniel Heinz
Electron. J. Statist. 3: 290-315 (2009). DOI: 10.1214/08-EJS269

Abstract

Graphical models are used to describe the conditional independence relations in multivariate data. They have been used for a variety of problems, including log-linear models (Liu and Massam, 2006), network analysis (Holland and Leinhardt, 1981; Strauss and Ikeda, 1990; Wasserman and Pattison, 1996; Pattison and Wasserman, 1999; Robins et al., 1999), graphical Gaussian models (Roverato and Whittaker, 1998; Giudici and Green, 1999; Marrelec and Benali, 2006), and genetics (Dobra et al., 2004). A distribution that satisfies the conditional independence structure of a graph is Markov. A graphical model is a family of distributions that is restricted to be Markov with respect to a certain graph. In a Bayesian problem, one may specify a prior over the graphical model. Such a prior is called a hyper Markov law if the random marginals also satisfy the independence constraints. Previous work in this area includes (Dempster, 1972; Dawid and Lauritzen, 1993; Giudici and Green, 1999; Letac and Massam, 2007). We explore graphical models based on a non-parametric family of distributions, developed from Dirichlet processes.

Citation

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Daniel Heinz. "Building hyper Dirichlet processes for graphical models." Electron. J. Statist. 3 290 - 315, 2009. https://doi.org/10.1214/08-EJS269

Information

Published: 2009
First available in Project Euclid: 14 April 2009

zbMATH: 1326.62012
MathSciNet: MR2495840
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1214/08-EJS269

Subjects:
Primary: 36E05
Secondary: 62G99

Keywords: covariance selection , decomposable graphical distribution , Hyper Markov law , non-parametric prior , stick-breaking measure

Rights: Copyright © 2009 The Institute of Mathematical Statistics and the Bernoulli Society

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