CSCI 739.02 - Human Behavior Modeling Homework 2 October 8, 2019
Homework 2: Making Inferences from the Posterior Distribution
Solutions to this assignment are to be submitted in myCourses via Assignment (formerly
known as Dropbox). The submission deadline is Wednesday October 16, 2019 at
11:59pm. You should submit a zipped file containing a pdf (this could be a scanned
handwritten document or a latex/Word generated pdf) with your written answers and the
Jupyter notebook with any code needed for the assignment. Use comments to explain your
code. All code and plots should be in the notebook while
descriptions/explanations/derivations should be in the PDF.
Question: Inferring the posterior for a Gaussian likelihood example [PDF] The goal of this
assignment is to review Module 2 in class where we discussed different techniques for deriving the
parameters of the posterior distribution. We reviewed the direct estimation of parameters using conjugate
priors, point estimations (MAP and MLE) of the posterior, and lastly, simulating and testing parameters
in order to eventually generate samples directly (Metropolis-Hastings Sampling a form of Markov Chain
Monte Carlo - MCMC). Statistics of the samples can then be calculated.
If x1, x2, . . . , xn are independent observations of a random variable x in a dataset of size n, then the
likelihood for the model (or the joint probability of all f(X|θ) = Yni=1f(Xi|)
Because the Gaussian distribution is used quite a bit in behavior modeling, we will dive into working
代写CSCI 739.02作业、Python编程作业调试
with the Gaussian likelihood function in the following exercises:
(a) (20 points) Derive the form of the posterior distribution if the likelihood is a Gaussian with known
variance σ2, but unknown mean µ, where the conjugate prior is also of the Gaussian form. This
is a contrived example since we generally do not know σ2, but it keeps the mathematics simpler,
while still making the concepts clear. Use f(µ|X) ∝ f(X|µ)f(µ)
What can you say about the relationship between the parameters of the posterior, prior and likelihood
functions?
(b) (30 points) For the example described above, derive the expressions for the maximum likelihood
θMLE and maximum a posteriori θMAP
(c) (35 points) Suppose we have a class of 30 students who are about to take an exam, their heart rates
(HR) are measured and the mean HR is ¯x = 75, with a standard deviation σ = 10 (in line with the
derivations above, variance is known). Heart rate can give a measure of how stressed the students
are going in to an exam. But having taken similar measurements before, over different semester
exams, the past HR means have given us an overall mean µ of 70. The past means have varied from
semester to semester giving us a standard deviation of the means of τ = 5, i.e. τ reflects how much
our past means have varied but does not really reflect the variability of the individual heart rates.
You goal is ultimately to update the knowledge of µ in f(µ|x). Using the expressions obtained
above, find the value of θMAP. Be careful when substituting the different values of means and
variances/std dev in your formula.
Which function has more influence on the posterior in this problem? The prior or the likelihood?
Why do you conclude this?
(d) (15 points) Using the Metropolis-Hastings algorithm, write your own sampler to simulate points
from the posterior. The steps to accomplish this are:
1. Establish the starting value for parameter θ
j=0; set the counter j=1
2. Draw a “candidate” parameter (or proposal) θc
from a proposal distribution (usually another
Gaussian)
3. Compute the ratio ρ = min(1,f(θc)f(X|θc)f(θj−1)f(X|θj−1))
4. Compare ρ with a random draw u from U(0, 1). If ρ > u, then accept the proposal by setting; Record the number of accepted proposals. Efficiency of the
algorithm will be computed as #num accepts
#num iterations
5. Set j = j + 1 and return to step 2 until enough draws are obtained
You are provided with a Jupyter notebook Sampling.ipynb that was written for a binomial
likelihood and beta prior. Modify this sample code to (i) write your MCMC sampler for the
problem described in part (c) and (ii) plot the true posterior, the distribution of your simulated
samples as well as the distribution of prior samples, all on the same figure. Note that your
likelihood is a Gaussian with known variance and there is a lot more code here than is required
for your homework.
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