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Jonas Wahl

Jonas Wahl contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

4 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

PRIM: Meta-Learned Bayesian Root Cause Analysis

Root cause analysis (RCA) in complex systems is challenging due to error propagation across multiple variables, the need for structural causal knowledge, and the computational cost of inference at test time. We introduce PRIM (Prior-fitted Root cause Identification with Meta-learning), a causal meta-learning approach that frames RCA as a Bayesian inference task over a synthetic prior of causal models. By marginalising out structural uncertainty, PRIM implicitly identifies changes in the data-generating mechanism between baseline and anomalous periods. In doing so, PRIM infers distributional differences without explicit statistical testing, and implicitly learns causal structure without model fitting at test time. Following the simulation-based meta-learning paradigm of prior-fitted networks, PRIM uses a Model-Averaged Causal Estimation (MACE) transformer neural process that jointly attends over observational and anomalous samples and the causal structure of nodes, enabling zero-shot inference in 17,ms for systems with up to 100 variables. Across synthetic benchmarks and two realistic benchmark datasets, PetShop and CausRCA, PRIM is competitive with methods that are aware of the system's causal graphical structure a priori while outperforming graph-unaware methods on several tasks. Lightweight fine-tuning to specific domains and data dynamics improves performance further.

preprint2021arXiv

Traces On Diagram Algebras I: Free Partition Quantum Groups, Random Lattice Paths And Random Walks On Trees

We classify extremal traces on the seven direct limit algebras of noncrossing partitions arising from the classification of free partition quantum groups of Banica-Speicher (arXiv:0808.2628) and Weber (arXiv:1201.4723). For the infinite-dimensional Temperley-Lieb-algebra (corresponding to the quantum group $O^+_N$) and the Motzkin algebra ($B^+_N$), the classification of extremal traces implies a classification result for well-known types of central random lattice paths. For the $2$-Fuss-Catalan algebra ($H_N^+$) we solve the classification problem by computing the \emph{minimal or exit boundary} (also known as the \emph{absolute}) for central random walks on the Fibonacci tree, thereby solving a probabilistic problem of independent interest, and to our knowledge the first such result for a nonhomogeneous tree. In the course of this article, we also discuss the branching graphs for all seven examples of free partition quantum groups, compute those that were not already known, and provide new formulas for the dimensions of their irreducible representations.

preprint2020arXiv

Traces on diagram algebras II: Centralizer algebras of easy groups and new variations of the Young graph

In continuation of our recent work arXiv:2006.07312, we classify the extremal traces on infinite diagram algebras that appear in the context of Schur-Weyl duality for Banica and Speicher's easy groups. We show that the branching graphs of these algebras describe walks on new variations of the Young graph which describe curious ways of growing Young diagrams. As a consequence, we prove that the extremal traces on generic rook-Brauer algebras are always extensions of extremal traces on the group algebra $\mathbb{C}[S_{\infty}]$ of the infinite symmetric group. Moreover, we conjecture that the same is true for generic parameter deformations of the centralizers of the hyperoctahedral group and we reduce this conjecture to a conceptually much simpler numerical statement. Lastly, we address the trace classification problem for the Schur-Weyl dual of the halfliberated orthogonal group $O_N^*$, in which case extremal traces are always extensions of extremal traces on $\mathbb{C}[S_{\infty} \times S_{\infty}]$. Our approach relies on methods developed by Vershik and Nikitin.

preprint2018arXiv

The Fourier algebra of a rigid $C^{\ast}$-tensor category

Completely positive and completely bounded mutlipliers on rigid $C^{\ast}$-tensor categories were introduced by Popa and Vaes. Using these notions, we define and study the Fourier-Stieltjes algebra, the Fourier algebra and the algebra of completely bounded multipliers of a rigid $C^{\ast}$-tensor category. The rich structure that these algebras have in the setting of locally compact groups is still present in the setting of rigid $C^{\ast}$-tensor categories. We also prove that Leptin's characterization of amenability still holds in this setting, and we collect some natural observations on property (T).