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Methoden vergelijken

Bekijk de geselecteerde methoden naast elkaar; rijen die verschillen zijn gemarkeerd.

GES Algoritme×NOTEARS: Continue Optimalisatie voor Causale Structuurlering×
VakgebiedCausale inferentieCausale inferentie
FamilieMachine learningMachine learning
Jaar van ontstaan20022018
GrondleggerDavid Maxwell ChickeringZheng, Aragam, Ravikumar & Xing
TypeScore-based causal structure learning algorithmContinuous optimization algorithm for causal DAG discovery
Oorspronkelijke bronChickering, D. M. (2002). Optimal structure identification with greedy search. Journal of Machine Learning Research, 3, 507–554. link ↗Zheng, X., Aragam, B., Ravikumar, P., & Xing, E. P. (2018). DAGs with NO TEARS: Continuous optimization for structure learning. Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems, 31. link ↗
AliassenGreedy Equivalence Search, GES Causal Discovery, Score-Based Greedy Search, Açgözlü Eşdeğerlik AramasıDAGs with NO TEARS, Continuous Structure Learning, Continuous DAG Optimization, Sürekli DAG Yapı Öğrenimi
Verwant21
SamenvattingGreedy Equivalence Search (GES) is a score-based algorithm for learning the causal structure of a set of variables from observational data. Introduced by David Maxwell Chickering in 2002, GES operates directly on Markov equivalence classes of directed acyclic graphs (DAGs), represented as completed partially directed acyclic graphs (CPDAGs). Under the assumptions of causal sufficiency and a faithful data-generating process, GES is proven to recover the true equivalence class in the large-sample limit.NOTEARS (No Tears: Acyclicity Regression Structure) is a causal structure learning algorithm introduced by Zheng, Aragam, Ravikumar, and Xing in 2018 at NeurIPS. It reformulates the combinatorially hard problem of learning a directed acyclic graph (DAG) from observational data as a continuous, smooth optimization problem, enabling the use of standard gradient-based solvers and removing the need for exhaustive combinatorial search over graph space.
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ScholarGateMethoden vergelijken: GES Algorithm · NOTEARS. Geraadpleegd op 2026-06-15 via https://scholargate.app/nl/compare