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Main Authors: Wojnowicz, Michael T., Gili, Kaitlin, Rath, Preetish, Miller, Eric, Miller, Jeffrey, Hancock, Clifford, O'Donovan, Meghan, Elkin-Frankston, Seth, Brunyé, Tad T., Hughes, Michael C.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.14973
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author Wojnowicz, Michael T.
Gili, Kaitlin
Rath, Preetish
Miller, Eric
Miller, Jeffrey
Hancock, Clifford
O'Donovan, Meghan
Elkin-Frankston, Seth
Brunyé, Tad T.
Hughes, Michael C.
author_facet Wojnowicz, Michael T.
Gili, Kaitlin
Rath, Preetish
Miller, Eric
Miller, Jeffrey
Hancock, Clifford
O'Donovan, Meghan
Elkin-Frankston, Seth
Brunyé, Tad T.
Hughes, Michael C.
contents We seek a computationally efficient model for a collection of time series arising from multiple interacting entities (a.k.a. "agents"). Recent models of temporal patterns across individuals fail to incorporate explicit system-level collective behavior that can influence the trajectories of individual entities. To address this gap in the literature, we present a new hierarchical switching-state model that can be trained in an unsupervised fashion to simultaneously learn both system-level and individual-level dynamics. We employ a latent system-level discrete state Markov chain that provides top-down influence on latent entity-level chains which in turn govern the emission of each observed time series. Recurrent feedback from the observations to the latent chains at both entity and system levels allows recent situational context to inform how dynamics unfold at all levels in bottom-up fashion. We hypothesize that including both top-down and bottom-up influences on group dynamics will improve interpretability of the learned dynamics and reduce error when forecasting. Our hierarchical switching recurrent dynamical model can be learned via closed-form variational coordinate ascent updates to all latent chains that scale linearly in the number of entities. This is asymptotically no more costly than fitting a separate model for each entity. Analysis of both synthetic data and real basketball team movements suggests our lean parametric model can achieve competitive forecasts compared to larger neural network models that require far more computational resources. Further experiments on soldier data as well as a synthetic task with 64 cooperating entities show how our approach can yield interpretable insights about team dynamics over time.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2401_14973
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Discovering group dynamics in coordinated time series via hierarchical recurrent switching-state models
Wojnowicz, Michael T.
Gili, Kaitlin
Rath, Preetish
Miller, Eric
Miller, Jeffrey
Hancock, Clifford
O'Donovan, Meghan
Elkin-Frankston, Seth
Brunyé, Tad T.
Hughes, Michael C.
Machine Learning
We seek a computationally efficient model for a collection of time series arising from multiple interacting entities (a.k.a. "agents"). Recent models of temporal patterns across individuals fail to incorporate explicit system-level collective behavior that can influence the trajectories of individual entities. To address this gap in the literature, we present a new hierarchical switching-state model that can be trained in an unsupervised fashion to simultaneously learn both system-level and individual-level dynamics. We employ a latent system-level discrete state Markov chain that provides top-down influence on latent entity-level chains which in turn govern the emission of each observed time series. Recurrent feedback from the observations to the latent chains at both entity and system levels allows recent situational context to inform how dynamics unfold at all levels in bottom-up fashion. We hypothesize that including both top-down and bottom-up influences on group dynamics will improve interpretability of the learned dynamics and reduce error when forecasting. Our hierarchical switching recurrent dynamical model can be learned via closed-form variational coordinate ascent updates to all latent chains that scale linearly in the number of entities. This is asymptotically no more costly than fitting a separate model for each entity. Analysis of both synthetic data and real basketball team movements suggests our lean parametric model can achieve competitive forecasts compared to larger neural network models that require far more computational resources. Further experiments on soldier data as well as a synthetic task with 64 cooperating entities show how our approach can yield interpretable insights about team dynamics over time.
title Discovering group dynamics in coordinated time series via hierarchical recurrent switching-state models
topic Machine Learning
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.14973