This article previews a presentation by Kevin Murphy (Google Brain) at MBZUAI on a unified perspective of machine learning, based on his book "Probabilistic Machine Learning: Advanced Topics". The presentation will cover the "4 pillars of ML": predictions, decisions, discovery and generation. Murphy will summarize recent methods and his own contributions in each of these tasks. Why it matters: Hosting prominent international AI researchers strengthens MBZUAI's position as a global hub for AI research and education.
This paper introduces a unified deep autoregressive model (UAE) for cardinality estimation that learns joint data distributions from both data and query workloads. It uses differentiable progressive sampling with the Gumbel-Softmax trick to incorporate supervised query information into the deep autoregressive model. Experiments show UAE achieves better accuracy and efficiency compared to state-of-the-art methods.
Amir Goharshady from Hong Kong University of Science and Technology presented a talk at MBZUAI on martingale-based verification of probabilistic programs. The talk covered using martingale-based approaches for proving termination and synthesizing cost bounds for probabilistic programs, automating program analysis with template-based methods. He also discussed remaining challenges and open problems in the area. Why it matters: Advances in formal verification and analysis of probabilistic programs are crucial for ensuring the reliability and safety of AI systems that rely on randomization.
Patrick van der Smagt, Director of AI Research at Volkswagen Group, discussed the use of generative machine learning models for predicting and controlling complex stochastic systems in robotics. The talk highlighted examples in robotics and beyond and addressed the challenges of achieving quality and trust in AI systems. He also mentioned his involvement in a European industry initiative on trust in AI and his membership in the AI Council of the State of Bavaria. Why it matters: Understanding control in robotics, along with trust in AI, are key issues for further development of autonomous systems, especially in industrial applications within the GCC region.
Dr. Xinwei Sun from Microsoft Research Asia presented research on trustworthy AI, focusing on statistical learning with theoretical guarantees. The work covers methods for sparse recovery with false-discovery rate analysis and causal inference tools for robustness and explainability. Consistency and identifiability were addressed theoretically, with applications shown in medical imaging analysis. Why it matters: The research contributes to addressing key limitations of current AI models regarding explainability, reproducibility, robustness, and fairness, which are crucial for real-world applications in sensitive fields like healthcare.
This article discusses methods for handling label noise in deep learning, including extracting confident examples and modeling label noise. Tongliang Liu from the University of Sydney presented these approaches. The talk aimed to provide participants with a basic understanding of learning with noisy labels. Why it matters: As AI models are increasingly trained on large, noisy datasets, techniques for robust learning become crucial for reliable real-world performance.
Emilio Porcu from Khalifa University presented on temporally evolving generalized networks, where graphs evolve over time with changing topologies. The presentation addressed challenges in building semi-metrics and isometric embeddings for these networks. The research uses kernel specification and network-based metrics and is illustrated using a traffic accident dataset. Why it matters: This work advances the application of kernel methods to dynamic graph structures, relevant for modeling evolving relationships in various domains.
This article discusses domain shift in machine learning, where testing data differs from training data, and methods to mitigate it via domain adaptation and generalization. Domain adaptation uses labeled source data and unlabeled target data. Domain generalization uses labeled data from single or multiple source domains to generalize to unseen target domains. Why it matters: Research in mitigating domain shift enhances the robustness and applicability of AI models in diverse real-world scenarios.