Beyond Forecasting: Compositional Time Series Reasoning for End-to-End Task Execution
In recent decades, there has been substantial advances in time series models and benchmarks across various individual tasks, such as time series forecasting, classification, and anomaly detection. Meanwhile, compositional reasoning in time series is prevalent in real-world applications (e.g., decisi...
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Zusammenfassung: | In recent decades, there has been substantial advances in time series models
and benchmarks across various individual tasks, such as time series
forecasting, classification, and anomaly detection. Meanwhile, compositional
reasoning in time series is prevalent in real-world applications (e.g.,
decision-making and compositional question answering) and is in great demand.
Unlike simple tasks that primarily focus on predictive accuracy, compositional
reasoning emphasizes the synthesis of diverse information from both time series
data and various domain knowledge, making it distinct and extremely more
challenging. In this paper, we introduce Compositional Time Series Reasoning, a
new task of handling intricate multistep reasoning tasks from time series data.
Specifically, this new task focuses on various question instances requiring
structural and compositional reasoning abilities on time series data, such as
decision-making and compositional question answering. As an initial attempt to
tackle this novel task, we developed TS-Reasoner, a program-aided approach that
utilizes large language model (LLM) to decompose a complex task into steps of
programs that leverage existing time series models and numerical subroutines.
Unlike existing reasoning work which only calls off-the-shelf modules,
TS-Reasoner allows for the creation of custom modules and provides greater
flexibility to incorporate domain knowledge as well as user-specified
constraints. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our method through a
comprehensive set of experiments. These promising results indicate potential
opportunities in the new task of time series reasoning and highlight the need
for further research. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.04047 |