JMLR

Variational Inference for Uncertainty Quantification: an Analysis of Trade-offs

Authors
Charles C. Margossian Loucas Pillaud-Vivien Lawrence K. Saul
Research Topics
Machine Learning
Paper Information
  • Journal:
    Journal of Machine Learning Research
  • Added to Tracker:
    Dec 30, 2025
Abstract

Given an intractable distribution $p$, the problem of variational inference (VI) is to find the best approximation from some more tractable family $Q$. Commonly, one chooses $Q$ to be a family of factorized distributions (i.e., the mean-field assumption), even though $p$ itself does not factorize. We show that this mismatch leads to an impossibility theorem: if $p$ does not factorize, then any factorized approximation $q\!\in\!Q$ can correctly estimate at most one of the following three measures of uncertainty: (i) the marginal variances, (ii) the marginal precisions, or (iii) the generalized variance (which for elliptical distributions is closely related to the entropy). In practice, the best variational approximation in $Q$ is found by minimizing some divergence $D(q,p)$ between distributions, and so we ask: how does the choice of divergence determine which measure of uncertainty, if any, is correctly estimated by VI? We consider the classic Kullback-Leibler divergences, the more general $\alpha$-divergences, and a score-based divergence which compares $\nabla \log p$ and $\nabla \log q$. We thoroughly analyze the case where $p$ is a Gaussian and $q$ is a (factorized) Gaussian. In this setting, we show that all the considered divergences can be ordered based on the estimates of uncertainty they yield as objective functions for VI. Finally, we empirically evaluate the validity of this ordering when the target distribution $p$ is not Gaussian.

Author Details
Charles C. Margossian
Author
Loucas Pillaud-Vivien
Author
Lawrence K. Saul
Author
Research Topics & Keywords
Machine Learning
Research Area
Citation Information
APA Format
Charles C. Margossian , Loucas Pillaud-Vivien & Lawrence K. Saul . Variational Inference for Uncertainty Quantification: an Analysis of Trade-offs. Journal of Machine Learning Research .
BibTeX Format
@article{paper728,
  title = { Variational Inference for Uncertainty Quantification: an Analysis of Trade-offs },
  author = { Charles C. Margossian and Loucas Pillaud-Vivien and Lawrence K. Saul },
  journal = { Journal of Machine Learning Research },
  url = { https://www.jmlr.org/papers/v26/24-0878.html }
}