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Learning Chaotic Dynamics from Time Series Data

Learning Chaotic Dynamics from Time Series Data. A Recurrent Support Vector Machine Approach Vinay Varadan. Primary Motivation. Understand the biological cell as a complex dynamical system

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Learning Chaotic Dynamics from Time Series Data

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  1. Learning Chaotic Dynamics from Time Series Data A Recurrent Support Vector Machine Approach Vinay Varadan

  2. Primary Motivation • Understand the biological cell as a complex dynamical system • Recent developments allow for in vivo post-translation protein modification measurements along with gene expression levels • Very expensive still, thus forcing only relatively sparse sampling of the modified protein concentrations in time • We invariably measure only a small number of variables of the system - in most cases just one or two variables • Develop modeling techniques to learn underlying dynamics with short time series without knowing the exact structure of the nonlinear differential equation • Even in the absence of noise, trajectory learning is still a difficult problem

  3. Problem Statement • Given the time series of one variable in a multidimensional nonlinear differential equation (NDE) • Learn the number of dimensions, viz. number of interacting variables in the underlying NDE • Given a few samples, be able to generate all future samples exactly matching the trajectory of the variable • Do this for all possible NDEs, including ones at the edge of chaos and also chaotic systems • In this project we concentrate on chaotic systems because the rest would be easier to learn, for a given dimensionality

  4. Previous Attempts At Chaotic Time Series Prediction • Taken’s delay embedding theorem (1981) – can recreate the geometry of the state-space using just delayed samples of the single observable • Thus for the time series measurement, y(t), y(t) = f(y(t-1), y(t-2), … , y(t-m)) • Nonlinear functions with universal approximation capability employed for f such as RBF, polynomial functions, rational functions, local methods • One-step predictors - these methods learn to predict one time step ahead when given past samples of the observable • Not good enough – not learning to follow trajectories of the dynamical system thus not learning the geometry of the state space well • We need to learn Recurrent models

  5. Recurrent Models - SVM • Consider learning models of the form • In order to estimate the function f, we use Recurrent Least Squares Support Vector Machines • We can rewrite the above equation in terms of the given data and the error variables as

  6. Recurrent Training using SVM • The training of the network is formulated as • The final term of the equation to be minimized refers to the Least Squares formulation • We can now define the Lagrangian and derive the optimality conditions appropriately • Further, we can eliminate the calculation of w explicitly and use just the Kernel formulation

  7. Recurrent Training using SVM • The resulting recurrent simulation model is given as • For the Recurrent SVM case, the parameter estimation problem becomes nonconvex • We thus have to use sequential quadratic programming

  8. Recurrent Model Performance • Performance of different prediction algorithms on a chaotic Predator-Prey model

  9. Conclusion and Pending Work • Recurrent SVM models are able to capture the underlying dynamics much better compared to other models • In the past, we have developed an Improved Least Squares (ILS) formulation for use in modeling chaotic systems • Need to explore how that can be integrated with SVMs

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