Goto

Collaborating Authors

 absolute discounting


The power of absolute discounting: all-dimensional distribution estimation

Neural Information Processing Systems

Categorical models are a natural fit for many problems. When learning the distribution of categories from samples, high-dimensionality may dilute the data. Minimax optimality is too pessimistic to remedy this issue. A serendipitously discovered estimator, absolute discounting, corrects empirical frequencies by subtracting a constant from observed categories, which it then redistributes among the unobserved. It outperforms classical estimators empirically, and has been used extensively in natural language modeling. In this paper, we rigorously explain the prowess of this estimator using less pessimistic notions. We show that (1) absolute discounting recovers classical minimax KL-risk rates, (2) it is \emph{adaptive} to an effective dimension rather than the true dimension, (3) it is strongly related to the Good-Turing estimator and inherits its \emph{competitive} properties. We use power-law distributions as the cornerstone of these results.



Reviews: The power of absolute discounting: all-dimensional distribution estimation

Neural Information Processing Systems

This paper presents a theoretical examination of the optimality of absolute discounting similar to the examination of optimality of Good Turing in Orlitsky and Suresh (2015). Results for minimax optimality, adaptivity and competitiveness are presented, as well as an equivalence between absolute discounting and Good Turing in certain scenarios, which suggests a choice of discount. Experimental results demonstrate the quality of the approach, along with some interesting results on predicting terror attacks in classes of cities (e.g., cities with zero prior attacks) given prior data. The paper is very well written and crystal clear, and the results are quite interesting. This is an excellent addition to the literature on these methods.



The power of absolute discounting: all-dimensional distribution estimation

Falahatgar, Moein, Ohannessian, Mesrob I., Orlitsky, Alon, Pichapati, Venkatadheeraj

Neural Information Processing Systems

Categorical models are a natural fit for many problems. When learning the distribution of categories from samples, high-dimensionality may dilute the data. Minimax optimality is too pessimistic to remedy this issue. A serendipitously discovered estimator, absolute discounting, corrects empirical frequencies by subtracting a constant from observed categories, which it then redistributes among the unobserved. It outperforms classical estimators empirically, and has been used extensively in natural language modeling. In this paper, we rigorously explain the prowess of this estimator using less pessimistic notions.


The power of absolute discounting: all-dimensional distribution estimation

Falahatgar, Moein, Ohannessian, Mesrob I., Orlitsky, Alon, Pichapati, Venkatadheeraj

Neural Information Processing Systems

Categorical models are a natural fit for many problems. When learning the distribution of categories from samples, high-dimensionality may dilute the data. Minimax optimality is too pessimistic to remedy this issue. A serendipitously discovered estimator, absolute discounting, corrects empirical frequencies by subtracting a constant from observed categories, which it then redistributes among the unobserved. It outperforms classical estimators empirically, and has been used extensively in natural language modeling. In this paper, we rigorously explain the prowess of this estimator using less pessimistic notions. We show that (1) absolute discounting recovers classical minimax KL-risk rates, (2) it is \emph{adaptive} to an effective dimension rather than the true dimension, (3) it is strongly related to the Good-Turing estimator and inherits its \emph{competitive} properties. We use power-law distributions as the cornerstone of these results. We validate the theory via synthetic data and an application to the Global Terrorism Database.