Automatic taxonomy generation: Issues and possibilities
Raghu Krishnapuram, Krishna Kummamuru
IFSA 2003
We apply Bayesian reasoning techniques to perform fault localization in complex communication systems while using dynamic, ambiguous, uncertain, or incorrect information about the system structure and state. We introduce adaptations of two Bayesian reasoning techniques for polytrees, iterative belief updating, and iterative most probable explanation. We show that these approximate schemes can be applied to belief networks of arbitrary shape and overcome the inherent exponential complexity associated with exact Bayesian reasoning. We show through simulation that our approximate schemes are almost optimally accurate, can identify multiple simultaneous faults in an event driven manner, and incorporate both positive and negative information into the reasoning process. We show that fault localization through iterative belief updating is resilient to noise in the observed symptoms and prove that Bayesian reasoning can now be used in practice to provide effective fault localization. © 2004 IEEE.
Raghu Krishnapuram, Krishna Kummamuru
IFSA 2003
Liat Ein-Dor, Y. Goldschmidt, et al.
IBM J. Res. Dev
Thomas M. Cover
IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory
David A. Selby
IBM J. Res. Dev