ExDBN: Learning Dynamic Bayesian Networks Using Extended Mixed-Integer Programming Formulations

Abstract

Causal learning from data has received much attention recently. Bayesian networks can be used to capture causal relationships. There, one recovers a weighted directed acyclic graph in which random variables are represented by vertices, and the weights associated with each edge represent the strengths of the causal relationships between them. This concept is extended to capture dynamic effects by introducing a dependency on past data, which may be captured by the structural equation model. This formalism is utilized in the present contribution to propose a score-based learning algorithm. A mixed-integer quadratic program is formulated and an algorithmic solution proposed, in which the pre-generation of exponentially many acyclicity constraints is avoided by utilizing the so-called branch-and-cut (``lazy constraint'') method. Comparing the novel approach to the state-of-the-art, we show that the proposed approach turns out to produce more accurate results when applied to small and medium-sized synthetic instances containing up to 80 time series. Lastly, two interesting applications in bioscience and finance, to which the method is directly applied, further stress the importance of developing highly accurate, globally convergent solvers that can handle instances of modest size.

Cite

Text

Rytíř et al. "ExDBN: Learning Dynamic Bayesian Networks Using Extended Mixed-Integer Programming Formulations." Transactions on Machine Learning Research, 2025.

Markdown

[Rytíř et al. "ExDBN: Learning Dynamic Bayesian Networks Using Extended Mixed-Integer Programming Formulations." Transactions on Machine Learning Research, 2025.](https://mlanthology.org/tmlr/2025/rytir2025tmlr-exdbn/)

BibTeX

@article{rytir2025tmlr-exdbn,
  title     = {{ExDBN: Learning Dynamic Bayesian Networks Using Extended Mixed-Integer Programming Formulations}},
  author    = {Rytíř, Pavel and Wodecki, Aleš and Korpas, Georgios and Marecek, Jakub},
  journal   = {Transactions on Machine Learning Research},
  year      = {2025},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/tmlr/2025/rytir2025tmlr-exdbn/}
}