Researcher profile

Mohammad Sabbaqi

Mohammad Sabbaqi contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Kalman Filtering on Cell Complexes

Inferring latent dynamics from multivariate time-series defined over topological cell complexes is crucial for capturing the complex, higher-order interactions inherent in real-world systems such as in water, sensor, and transportation networks. However, reconstructing these latent states is challenging because the signals are coupled across higher-order topologies, while high dimensionality, nonlinear observations, and unknown structures increase the difficulty. To address this, we propose a topology-aware state space framework derived from stochastic partial differential equations on cell complexes. State evolution follows heat-like topological diffusion, with perturbations propagating along boundary operators. Under partial observability, we model observations using a cell complex convolution of latent states coupled with a nonlinear mapping. We perform recursive state estimation via an Extended Kalman Filter, simultaneously learning model parameters and uncertainties through an online Expectation-Maximization algorithm. Finally, for scenarios where only lower-order topological structure is known, e.g., nodes and edges, as in critical infrastructure networks, we introduce a heuristic cell identification algorithm to explicitly infer the second-order cell structures. Validations on synthetic and real datasets from water, sensor and transportation networks demonstrate that our approach yields reliable estimates under partial observability and successfully recovers the underlying topological structures.

preprint2022arXiv

Graph-Time Convolutional Neural Networks: Architecture and Theoretical Analysis

Devising and analyzing learning models for spatiotemporal network data is of importance for tasks including forecasting, anomaly detection, and multi-agent coordination, among others. Graph Convolutional Neural Networks (GCNNs) are an established approach to learn from time-invariant network data. The graph convolution operation offers a principled approach to aggregate multiresolution information. However, extending the convolution principled learning and respective analysis to the spatiotemporal domain is challenging because spatiotemporal data have more intrinsic dependencies. Hence, a higher flexibility to capture jointly the spatial and the temporal dependencies is required to learn meaningful higher-order representations. Here, we leverage product graphs to represent the spatiotemporal dependencies in the data and introduce Graph-Time Convolutional Neural Networks (GTCNNs) as a principled architecture to aid learning. The proposed approach can work with any type of product graph and we also introduce a parametric product graph to learn also the spatiotemporal coupling. The convolution principle further allows a similar mathematical tractability as for GCNNs. In particular, the stability result shows GTCNNs are stable to spatial perturbations but there is an implicit trade-off between discriminability and robustness; i.e., the more complex the model, the less stable. Extensive numerical results on benchmark datasets corroborate our findings and show the GTCNN compares favorably with state-of-the-art solutions. We anticipate the GTCNN to be a starting point for more sophisticated models that achieve good performance but are also fundamentally grounded.