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probabilistic-programming

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pyro
eb8680
eb8680 commented Dec 14, 2021

NumPyro now has several excellent introductory examples with no direct counterparts in Pyro. Porting one of these to Pyro would be a great way for someone to simultaneously learn more about Bayesian data analysis and make a valuable open source contribution.

If you are reading this and want to give one of them a try, please leave a comment here so that other peo

help wanted Examples good first issue
bryorsnef
bryorsnef commented Nov 15, 2021

The currently implemented version of the horseshoe distribution is not the parameterization that most ML papers use. This limits the ease of use of this as, for example, a prior in a tfp.layers.KLDivergenceAddLoss or in tfp.layers.DenseReparameterization. The regularized horseshoe would also be useful as an implemented distribution.

The alternative parameterization is shown here:
https://www.

willtebbutt
willtebbutt commented Oct 19, 2019

There are a variety of interesting optimisations that can be performed on kernels of the form

k(x, z) = w_1 * k_1(x, z) + w_2 * k_2(x, z) + ... + w_L k_L(x, z)

A naive recursive implementation in terms of the current Sum and Scaled kernels hides opportunities for parallelism in the computation of each term, and the summation over terms.

Notable examples of kernels with th

cscherrer
cscherrer commented Mar 26, 2021

Rather than trying to rebuild all functionality from Distributions.jl, we're first focusing on reimplementing logdensity (logpdf in Distributions), and delegating most other functions to the current Distributions implementations.

So for example, we have

distproxy(d::Normal{(:μ, :σ)}) = Dists.Normal(d.μ, d.σ)

This makes some functions in Distributions.jl available through

good first issue

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