/particles

Sequential Monte Carlo in python

Primary LanguagePythonMIT LicenseMIT

particles

Sequential Monte Carlo in python.

Motivation

This package was developed to complement the following book:

An introduction to Sequential Monte Carlo

by Nicolas Chopin and Omiros Papaspiliopoulos.

Features

  • particle filtering: bootstrap filter, guided filter, APF.

  • resampling: multinomial, residual, stratified, systematic and SSP.

  • possibility to define state-space models using some (basic) form of probabilistic programming; see below for an example.

  • SQMC (Sequential quasi Monte Carlo); routines for computing the Hilbert curve, and generating RQMC sequences.

  • particle smoothing: fixed-lag smoothing, on-line smoothing, FFBS (forward filtering, backward sampling), two-filter smoothing (O(N) and O(N^2) variants). FFBS for SQMC is also implemented.

  • Exact filtering/smoothing algorithms: Kalman (for linear Gaussian models) and forward-backward recursions (for finite hidden Markov models).

  • Standard and waste-free SMC samplers: SMC tempering, IBIS (a.k.a. data tempering). SMC samplers for binary words (Schäfer and Chopin, 2014), with application to variable selection.

  • Bayesian parameter inference for state-space models: PMCMC (PMMH, Particle Gibbs) and SMC^2.

  • Basic support for parallel computation (i.e. running multiple SMC algorithms on different CPU cores).

  • Variance estimators (Chan and Lai, 2013 ; Lee and Whiteley, 2018; Olsson and Douc, 2019)

  • nested sampling (basic, experimental).

Example

Here is how you may define a parametric state-space model:

import particles
import particles.state_space_models as ssm
import particles.distributions as dists

class ToySSM(ssm.StateSpaceModel):
    def PX0(self):  # Distribution of X_0 
        return dists.Normal()  # X_0 ~ N(0, 1)
    def PX(self, t, xp):  # Distribution of X_t given X_{t-1}
        return dists.Normal(loc=xp)  # X_t ~ N( X_{t-1}, 1)
    def PY(self, t, xp, x):  # Distribution of Y_t given X_t (and X_{t-1}) 
        return dists.Normal(loc=x, scale=self.sigma)  # Y_t ~ N(X_t, sigma^2)

You may now choose a particular model within this class, and simulate data from it:

my_model = ToySSM(sigma=0.2)
x, y = my_model.simulate(200)  # sample size is 200

To run a bootstrap particle filter for this model and data y, simply do:

alg = particles.SMC(fk=ssm.Bootstrap(ssm=my_model, data=y), N=200)
alg.run()

That's it! Head to the documentation for more examples, explanations, and installation instructions.

Who do I talk to?

Nicolas Chopin (nicolas.chopin@ensae.fr) is the main author, contributor, and person to blame if things do not work as expected.

Bug reports, feature requests, questions, rants, etc are welcome, preferably on the github page.