Sampling First Order Logical Particles
Abstract
Approximate inference in dynamic systems is the problem of estimating the state of the system given a sequence of actions and partial observations. High precision estimation is fundamental in many applications like diagnosis, natural language processing, tracking, planning, and robotics. In this paper we present an algorithm that samples possible deterministic executions of a probabilistic sequence. The algorithm takes advantage of a compact representation (using first order logic) for actions and world states to improve the precision of its estimation. Theoretical and empirical results show that the algorithm's expected error is smaller than propositional sampling and Sequential Monte Carlo (SMC) sampling techniques.
Cite
Text
Hajishirzi and Amir. "Sampling First Order Logical Particles." Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, 2008.Markdown
[Hajishirzi and Amir. "Sampling First Order Logical Particles." Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, 2008.](https://mlanthology.org/uai/2008/hajishirzi2008uai-sampling/)BibTeX
@inproceedings{hajishirzi2008uai-sampling,
title = {{Sampling First Order Logical Particles}},
author = {Hajishirzi, Hannaneh and Amir, Eyal},
booktitle = {Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence},
year = {2008},
pages = {248-255},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/uai/2008/hajishirzi2008uai-sampling/}
}