Researcher profile

Harri Lähdesmäki

Harri Lähdesmäki contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

4 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Bayesian Nonparametric Mixed-Effect ODEs with Gaussian Processes

Dynamical modelling is central to many scientific domains, including pharmacometrics, systems biology, physiology, and epidemiology. In these settings, heterogeneity is often intrinsic: different subjects or units follow related but distinct continuous-time dynamics. Classical nonlinear mixed-effects Ordinary Differential Equation (ODE) models address this by combining population-level structure with subject-specific effects, but they rely on a parametric vector field and are therefore vulnerable to structural misspecification and unmodelled mechanisms. This motivates nonparametric approaches that can retain principled uncertainty quantification, yet existing nonparametric ODE methods typically assume a single shared dynamical system rather than an explicit mixed-effect hierarchy over subject-specific dynamics. We propose MEGPODE, a Bayesian nonparametric mixed-effect ODE model in which each subject's vector field is decomposed into a shared population component and a subject-specific deviation, both endowed with Gaussian process (GP) priors. To avoid repeated ODE solves per subject during training, we combine state-space GP trajectory priors with virtual collocation observations, yielding Kalman-smoothing trajectory updates and closed-form regressions for the vector fields. Across controlled heterogeneous ODE benchmarks spanning oscillatory, biomedical systems, MEGPODE improves population-field recovery and subject-level trajectory prediction relative to strong baselines.

preprint2022arXiv

Learning Conditional Variational Autoencoders with Missing Covariates

Conditional variational autoencoders (CVAEs) are versatile deep generative models that extend the standard VAE framework by conditioning the generative model with auxiliary covariates. The original CVAE model assumes that the data samples are independent, whereas more recent conditional VAE models, such as the Gaussian process (GP) prior VAEs, can account for complex correlation structures across all data samples. While several methods have been proposed to learn standard VAEs from partially observed datasets, these methods fall short for conditional VAEs. In this work, we propose a method to learn conditional VAEs from datasets in which auxiliary covariates can contain missing values as well. The proposed method augments the conditional VAEs with a prior distribution for the missing covariates and estimates their posterior using amortised variational inference. At training time, our method marginalises the uncertainty associated with the missing covariates while simultaneously maximising the evidence lower bound. We develop computationally efficient methods to learn CVAEs and GP prior VAEs that are compatible with mini-batching. Our experiments on simulated datasets as well as on a clinical trial study show that the proposed method outperforms previous methods in learning conditional VAEs from non-temporal, temporal, and longitudinal datasets.

preprint2022arXiv

Variational multiple shooting for Bayesian ODEs with Gaussian processes

Recent machine learning advances have proposed black-box estimation of unknown continuous-time system dynamics directly from data. However, earlier works are based on approximative ODE solutions or point estimates. We propose a novel Bayesian nonparametric model that uses Gaussian processes to infer posteriors of unknown ODE systems directly from data. We derive sparse variational inference with decoupled functional sampling to represent vector field posteriors. We also introduce a probabilistic shooting augmentation to enable efficient inference from arbitrarily long trajectories. The method demonstrates the benefit of computing vector field posteriors, with predictive uncertainty scores outperforming alternative methods on multiple ODE learning tasks.

preprint2021arXiv

Learning continuous-time PDEs from sparse data with graph neural networks

The behavior of many dynamical systems follow complex, yet still unknown partial differential equations (PDEs). While several machine learning methods have been proposed to learn PDEs directly from data, previous methods are limited to discrete-time approximations or make the limiting assumption of the observations arriving at regular grids. We propose a general continuous-time differential model for dynamical systems whose governing equations are parameterized by message passing graph neural networks. The model admits arbitrary space and time discretizations, which removes constraints on the locations of observation points and time intervals between the observations. The model is trained with continuous-time adjoint method enabling efficient neural PDE inference. We demonstrate the model's ability to work with unstructured grids, arbitrary time steps, and noisy observations. We compare our method with existing approaches on several well-known physical systems that involve first and higher-order PDEs with state-of-the-art predictive performance.