Workshop "Variational Bayes and Beyond: Bayesian Inference for Big Data"

This workshop is taking place at the Business and Industrial Statistics Workshop at the Statistical Society of Canada (SSC) 2021 Annual Meeting. It ran on Sunday 2021 June 13. See this link for the latest versions of all tutorials.

Part I: Sunday June 13, 11:00 AM–12:00 PM, EDT
Part II: Sunday June 13, 12:30 PM–1:30 PM, EDT
Part III: Sunday June 13, 1:40 PM–3:00 PM, EDT

Instructor:
  Professor Tamara Broderick
  Email:


Materials and Description

Title: Variational Bayes and beyond: Bayesian inference for big data

Abstract: Bayesian methods exhibit a number of desirable properties for modern data analysis---including (1) coherent quantification of uncertainty, (2) a modular modeling framework able to capture complex phenomena, (3) the ability to incorporate prior information from an expert source, and (4) interpretability. In practice, though, Bayesian inference necessitates approximation of a high-dimensional integral, and some traditional algorithms for this purpose can be slow---notably at data scales of current interest. The tutorial will cover modern tools for fast, approximate Bayesian inference at scale. One increasingly popular framework is provided by "variational Bayes" (VB), which formulates Bayesian inference as an optimization problem. We will examine key benefits and pitfalls of using VB in practice, with a focus on the widespread "mean-field variational Bayes" (MFVB) subtype. We will highlight properties that anyone working with VB, from the data analyst to the theoretician, should be aware of. In addition to VB, we will briefly cover recent data summarization techniques for scalable Bayesian inference that come equipped with finite-data theoretical guarantees on quality. We will motivate our exploration throughout with practical data analysis examples and point to a number of open problems in the field.

Prerequisites

Basic familiarity with Bayesian data analysis and its goals. Be familiar with the following concepts: priors, likelihoods, posteriors, Bayes Theorem, and conjugacy (for discrete and continuous distributions).