– [Friiam/Frumam] E. Morvant (IST Austria) : Domain Adaptation of Weighted Majority Votes via Perturbed Variation-based Self-Labeling

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Date/heure
Date(s) - 16 décembre 2013

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Domain Adaptation of Weighted Majority Votes via Perturbed Variation-based Self-Labeling By Emilie Morvant, IST Austria. Talk at Friiam/Frumam, 2e étage, St Charles In machine learning, the domain adaptation problem arrives when the test (target) and the train (source) data are generated from different distributions. A key applied issue is thus the design of algorithms able to gen- eralize on a new distribution, for which we have no label information. We consider the specific PAC-Bayesian situation focused on learning classification models defined as a weighted majority vote over a set of real- valued functions. In this context, we present PV-MinCq a new framework that general- izes a non-adaptative algorithm (MinCq). PV-MinCq follows the next principle. Jus- tified by a theoretical bound on the tar- get risk of the vote, we provide to MinCq a target sample labeled thanks to a per- tubed variation-based self-labeling focalized on the regions where the source and target marginals appear similar. We also study the influence of our self-labeling, from which we deduce an original process for tuning the hy- perparameters. Our experiments show very promising results on a synthetic problem.

– [Friiam/Frumam] E. Morvant (IST Austria) : Domain Adaptation of Weighted Majority Votes via Perturbed Variation-based Self-Labeling

Carte non disponible

Date/heure
Date(s) - 16 décembre 2013

Catégories Pas de Catégories


Domain Adaptation of Weighted Majority Votes via Perturbed Variation-based Self-Labeling\n\nBy Emilie Morvant, IST Austria.\n\nTalk at Friiam/Frumam, 2e étage, St Charles\n\nIn machine learning, the domain adaptation problem arrives when the test (target) and the train (source) data are generated from different distributions. A key applied issue is thus the design of algorithms able to gen- eralize on a new distribution, for which we have no label information. We consider the specific PAC-Bayesian situation focused on learning classification models defined as a weighted majority vote over a set of real- valued functions. In this context, we present PV-MinCq a new framework that general- izes a non-adaptative algorithm (MinCq). PV-MinCq follows the next principle. Jus- tified by a theoretical bound on the tar- get risk of the vote, we provide to MinCq a target sample labeled thanks to a per- tubed variation-based self-labeling focalized on the regions where the source and target marginals appear similar. We also study the influence of our self-labeling, from which we deduce an original process for tuning the hy- perparameters. Our experiments show very promising results on a synthetic problem.[

– [Friiam/Frumam] E. Morvant (IST Austria) : Domain Adaptation of Weighted Majority Votes via Perturbed Variation-based Self-Labeling

Carte non disponible

Date/heure
Date(s) - 16 décembre 2013

Catégories Pas de Catégories


Domain Adaptation of Weighted Majority Votes via Perturbed Variation-based Self-Labeling\n\nBy Emilie Morvant, IST Austria.\n\nTalk at Friiam/Frumam, 2e étage, St Charles\n\nIn machine learning, the domain adaptation problem arrives when the test (target) and the train (source) data are generated from different distributions. A key applied issue is thus the design of algorithms able to gen- eralize on a new distribution, for which we have no label information. We consider the specific PAC-Bayesian situation focused on learning classification models defined as a weighted majority vote over a set of real- valued functions. In this context, we present PV-MinCq a new framework that general- izes a non-adaptative algorithm (MinCq). PV-MinCq follows the next principle. Jus- tified by a theoretical bound on the tar- get risk of the vote, we provide to MinCq a target sample labeled thanks to a per- tubed variation-based self-labeling focalized on the regions where the source and target marginals appear similar. We also study the influence of our self-labeling, from which we deduce an original process for tuning the hy- perparameters. Our experiments show very promising results on a synthetic problem.[