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fit-hidden-markov-model

pjt222
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About

This skill fits Hidden Markov Models (HMMs) to time series data using the Baum-Welch algorithm for scenarios with unobservable latent states, like segmenting market regimes or biological sequences. It provides key capabilities including Viterbi decoding for the most likely state path, forward-backward probabilities, and model selection to compare different numbers of hidden states. Use it when you need to infer latent structures, compute sequence probabilities, or decode hidden state sequences from observed data.

Quick Install

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Documentation

Fit Hidden Markov Model

Fit hidden Markov model (HMM) to sequential watch data using Baum-Welch expectation-maximization algorithm, decode most likely hidden state sequence via Viterbi, and pick right number of hidden states through info criteria.

When Use

  • You see sequence of emissions but the under generative states not directly visible
  • You suspect your data is made by system that switches between finite number of regimes
  • You need to slice time series into latent phases (e.g., market regimes, speech phonemes, biological sequence annotation)
  • You want to compute probability of observed sequence under generative model
  • You need most likely sequence of hidden states given observations (decoding)
  • You compare models with different counts of hidden states for best complex-fit trade-off

Inputs

Required

InputTypeDescription
observationssequence/matrixObserved data sequence (univariate or multivariate)
n_hidden_statesintegerNumber of hidden states to fit (or a range for model selection)
emission_typestringDistribution family for emissions: "gaussian", "discrete", "poisson", "multinomial"

Optional

InputTypeDefaultDescription
initial_paramsdictrandom/heuristicInitial transition matrix, emission parameters, and start probabilities
n_restartsinteger10Number of random restarts to mitigate local optima
max_iterationsinteger500Maximum EM iterations per restart
convergence_tolfloat1e-6Log-likelihood convergence threshold for EM
state_rangelist of ints[n_hidden_states]Range of state counts for model selection
covariance_typestring"full"For Gaussian emissions: "full", "diagonal", "spherical"
regularizationfloat1e-6Small constant added to diagonal of covariance matrices to prevent singularity

Steps

Step 1: Define Hidden States and Observation Model

1.1. Set count of hidden states K (or candidate range for model pick in Step 5).

1.2. Pick emission distribution family by data type:

  • Continuous data: Gaussian (univariate or multivariate)
  • Count data: Poisson or negative binomial
  • Categorical data: discrete/multinomial

1.3. Set model bits:

  • Transition matrix A of size K x K: A[i,j] = P(z_t = j | z_{t-1} = i)
  • Emission params theta_k for each state k: distribution-specific (e.g., mean and covariance for Gaussian)
  • Initial state distribution pi: pi[k] = P(z_1 = k)

1.4. Check watch data is formatted right: no missing values in sequence, consistent dim, and enough length vs count of params.

Got: Clearly set HMM shape with K states, picked emission family, and clean watch data of length T >> K^2.

If fail: Data has missing values? Fill in or remove affected segments. T too small vs K? Drop K or get more data.

Step 2: Initialize Parameters

2.1. Make initial params for each of n_restarts restarts:

  • Transition matrix: Random stochastic matrix (each row from Dirichlet distribution) or slightly perturbed uniform matrix.
  • Emission params: Use K-means clustering on observations to init means; compute cluster variances for Gaussian emissions.
  • Initial distribution: Uniform or proportional to cluster sizes from K-means.

2.2. For first restart, use K-means-informed init (usually strongest start). For later restarts, use random perturbations.

2.3. Check all initial params are valid:

  • Transition matrix rows sum to 1 with all entries positive.
  • Emission params in valid domain (e.g., covariance matrices are positive definite).
  • Initial distribution sums to 1.

Got: n_restarts sets of valid initial params, with at least one data-driven init.

If fail: K-means fails to converge? Use pure random init with more restarts. Covariance matrices singular? Add regularization constant to diagonal.

Step 3: Run Baum-Welch EM for Parameter Estimation

3.1. E-step (Forward-Backward algorithm):

  • Compute forward probs alpha[t,k] = P(o_1,...,o_t, z_t=k | model) using recursion:
    • alpha[1,k] = pi[k] * b_k(o_1)
    • alpha[t,k] = sum_j(alpha[t-1,j] * A[j,k]) * b_k(o_t)
  • Compute backward probs beta[t,k] = P(o_{t+1},...,o_T | z_t=k, model):
    • beta[T,k] = 1
    • beta[t,k] = sum_j(A[k,j] * b_j(o_{t+1}) * beta[t+1,j])
  • Compute state posterior gamma[t,k] = P(z_t=k | O, model):
    • gamma[t,k] = alpha[t,k] * beta[t,k] / P(O | model)
  • Compute transition posterior xi[t,i,j] = P(z_t=i, z_{t+1}=j | O, model).

3.2. M-step (Param re-estimation):

  • Update transition matrix: A[i,j] = sum_t(xi[t,i,j]) / sum_t(gamma[t,i])
  • Update emission params using weighted sufficient stats:
    • Gaussian mean: mu_k = sum_t(gamma[t,k] * o_t) / sum_t(gamma[t,k])
    • Gaussian covariance: weighted scatter matrix plus regularization
    • Discrete: b_k(v) = sum_t(gamma[t,k] * I(o_t=v)) / sum_t(gamma[t,k])
  • Update initial distribution: pi[k] = gamma[1,k]

3.3. Compute log-likelihood: log P(O | model) = log sum_k(alpha[T,k]). Use log-sum-exp trick to block underflow.

3.4. Scaling: Use scaled forward-backward vars to block numerical underflow for long sequences. Normalize alpha at each time step and accumulate log scaling factors.

3.5. Repeat E-step and M-step until log-likelihood change is below convergence_tol or max_iterations hit.

3.6. Across all restarts, keep param set with highest final log-likelihood.

Got: Monotonically non-decreasing log-likelihood across iterations, converging within max_iterations. Final params are valid (stochastic matrices, positive-definite covariances).

If fail: Log-likelihood drops? There is bug in E-step or M-step -- check formulas. Convergence very slow? Try better init or bump max_iterations. Covariance becomes singular? Increase regularization.

Step 4: Apply Viterbi Decoding for Most Likely State Sequence

4.1. Init Viterbi vars:

  • delta[1,k] = log(pi[k]) + log(b_k(o_1))
  • psi[1,k] = 0 (no predecessor)

4.2. Recurse forward for t = 2,...,T:

  • delta[t,k] = max_j(delta[t-1,j] + log(A[j,k])) + log(b_k(o_t))
  • psi[t,k] = argmax_j(delta[t-1,j] + log(A[j,k]))

4.3. End:

  • z*_T = argmax_k(delta[T,k])
  • Best path log-prob: max_k(delta[T,k])

4.4. Backtrace for t = T-1,...,1:

  • z*_t = psi[t+1, z*_{t+1}]

4.5. Output decoded state sequence z* = (z*_1, ..., z*_T) and its log-prob.

4.6. Compare Viterbi path prob to total sequence prob from forward algorithm to check how dominant the best path is.

Got: Single most-likely state sequence of length T with each entry in {1,...,K}. Viterbi log-prob should be less than or equal to total log-likelihood.

If fail: Viterbi path has log-prob of negative infinity? Some transition or emission prob is zero where it should not be. Add floor values to block log(0).

Step 5: Perform Model Selection (BIC/AIC Across Model Orders)

5.1. For each candidate count of hidden states K in state_range, fit full HMM (Steps 2-4).

5.2. Compute count of free params p:

  • Transition matrix: K * (K - 1) (each row is simplex)
  • Emission params: depends on family (e.g., Gaussian with full covariance in d dimensions: K * (d + d*(d+1)/2))
  • Initial distribution: K - 1

5.3. Compute info criteria:

  • BIC = -2 * log_likelihood + p * log(T)
  • AIC = -2 * log_likelihood + 2 * p
  • AICc = AIC + 2*p*(p+1) / (T - p - 1) (small-sample correction)

5.4. Pick model with lowest BIC (preferred for consistency) or AIC (preferred for prediction). Report both.

5.5. Tabulate results: for each K, show log-likelihood, count of params, BIC, AIC, convergence status.

5.6. If best K is at edge of state_range, extend range and re-fit.

Got: Clear min in BIC/AIC spotting best count of hidden states. Picked model should have converged and have interpretable state meanings.

If fail: No clear min exists (monotonically decreasing BIC)? Model may be misspec -- think different emission family. All models have poor log-likelihood? Data may not follow HMM structure.

Step 6: Validate with Held-Out Data and Posterior Decoding

6.1. Split data into training and check sets (e.g., 80/20 or use many sequences if open).

6.2. Fit model on training data. Compute log-likelihood on held-out data using forward algorithm (do not re-fit params).

6.3. Posterior decoding (swap for Viterbi):

  • For each time step, give state with highest posterior prob: z^_t = argmax_k(gamma[t,k])
  • This maxes expected count of rightly decoded states (vs Viterbi which maxes joint path prob).

6.4. Compare Viterbi and posterior decoding:

  • Compute agree rate between the two decoded sequences.
  • Regions of disagreement show ambiguous state assignments.

6.5. Check state interpretability:

  • Check emission params for each state (means, variances, discrete distributions).
  • Confirm states match meaningful regimes in domain context.
  • Check state dwell times (implied by diagonal of A) are reasonable.

6.6. Compute held-out log-likelihood per observation and compare across model orders to confirm training-set model pick.

Got: Held-out log-likelihood is reasonably close to training log-likelihood (no big overfit). Viterbi and posterior decoding agree on 90%+ of time steps. States have distinct, interpretable emission distributions.

If fail: Held-out likelihood much worse than training? Model is overfit -- drop K or bump regularization. States not interpretable? Try different inits or different emission family.

Validation

  • Log-likelihood is monotonically non-decreasing across Baum-Welch iterations for each restart
  • Transition matrix is row-stochastic (rows sum to 1, all entries non-negative)
  • Emission params in valid domain (positive-definite covariances, valid probability distributions)
  • Viterbi path log-prob does not exceed total sequence log-prob
  • BIC/AIC curves show clear min at picked model order
  • Held-out log-likelihood confirms model works beyond training set
  • Forward and backward prob computations agree: P(O) = sum_k(alpha[T,k]) = sum_k(pi[k] * b_k(o_1) * beta[1,k])

Pitfalls

  • Local optima in EM: Baum-Welch algorithm converges to local max, not always global. Always use many random restarts and pick best.
  • Numerical underflow: Forward-backward probs shrink exponentially with sequence length. Use log-space compute or scaled vars to block underflow to zero.
  • Overfit with too many states: Each extra hidden state adds O(K + d^2) params. Use BIC (not just likelihood) for model pick and check on held-out data.
  • Label switching: Hidden states identifiable only up to swap. When compare models across restarts, match states by emission params, not by index.
  • Degenerate states: State may collapse to explain single observation (Gaussian with near-zero variance). Regularization on covariance matrices blocks this.
  • Mix Viterbi and posterior decoding: Viterbi gives single best joint path; posterior decoding gives best marginal state at each time step. They answer different questions and can clash big.
  • Ignore state dwell times: Geometric dwell-time distribution built into standard HMMs may be poor fit for data with long regime durations. Think hidden semi-Markov models if dwell times are non-geometric.

See Also

  • Model Markov Chain -- pre-req for grasping transition structure that under hidden layer
  • Simulate Stochastic Process -- can be used to make synthetic HMM data for testing and to simulate from fitted model for posterior predictive checks

GitHub Repository

pjt222/agent-almanac
Path: i18n/caveman/skills/fit-hidden-markov-model
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