Multinomial Belief Networks for Healthcare Data
Abstract
Healthcare data from patient or population cohorts are often characterized by sparsity, high missingness and relatively small sample sizes. In addition, being able to quantify uncertainty is often important in a medical context. To address these analytical requirements we propose a deep generative Bayesian model for multinomial count data. We develop a collapsed Gibbs sampling procedure that takes advantage of a series of augmentation relations, inspired by the Zhou–Cong–Chen model. We visualise the model’s ability to identify coherent substructures in the data using a dataset of handwritten digits. We then apply it to a large experimental dataset of DNA mutations in cancer and show that we can identify biologically meaningful clusters of mutational signatures in a fully data-driven way.
Cite
Text
Donker et al. "Multinomial Belief Networks for Healthcare Data." Proceedings of the 9th Machine Learning for Healthcare Conference, 2024.Markdown
[Donker et al. "Multinomial Belief Networks for Healthcare Data." Proceedings of the 9th Machine Learning for Healthcare Conference, 2024.](https://mlanthology.org/mlhc/2024/donker2024mlhc-multinomial/)BibTeX
@inproceedings{donker2024mlhc-multinomial,
title = {{Multinomial Belief Networks for Healthcare Data}},
author = {Donker, Hylke Cornelis and Neijzen, Dorien and Jong, Johann and Lunter, Gerton},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 9th Machine Learning for Healthcare Conference},
year = {2024},
volume = {252},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/mlhc/2024/donker2024mlhc-multinomial/}
}