Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6858906 | International Journal of Approximate Reasoning | 2017 | 21 Pages |
Abstract
Lifted inference aims at answering queries from statistical relational models by reasoning on populations of individuals as a whole instead of considering each individual singularly. Since the initial proposal by David Poole in 2003, many lifted inference techniques have appeared, by lifting different algorithms or using approximation involving different kinds of models, including parfactor graphs and Markov Logic Networks. Very recently lifted inference was applied to Probabilistic Logic Programming (PLP) under the distribution semantics, with proposals such as LP2 and Weighted First-Order Model Counting (WFOMC). Moreover, techniques for dealing with aggregation parfactors can be directly applied to PLP. In this paper we survey these approaches and present an experimental comparison on five models. The results show that WFOMC outperforms the other approaches, being able to exploit more symmetries.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Artificial Intelligence
Authors
Fabrizio Riguzzi, Elena Bellodi, Riccardo Zese, Giuseppe Cota, Evelina Lamma,