maximum margin interval tree
Maximum Margin Interval Trees
Learning a regression function using censored or interval-valued output data is an important problem in fields such as genomics and medicine. The goal is to learn a real-valued prediction function, and the training output labels indicate an interval of possible values. Whereas most existing algorithms for this task are linear models, in this paper we investigate learning nonlinear tree models. We propose to learn a tree by minimizing a margin-based discriminative objective function, and we provide a dynamic programming algorithm for computing the optimal solution in log-linear time. We show empirically that this algorithm achieves state-of-the-art speed and prediction accuracy in a benchmark of several data sets.
- North America > Canada > Quebec > Montreal (0.14)
- North America > United States > Iowa (0.04)
- North America > United States > California > Los Angeles County > Long Beach (0.04)
Reviews: Maximum Margin Interval Trees
The authors of this paper present a new decision tree algorithm for the interval regression problem. Leaves are partitioned using a margin based hinge loss similar to the L1-regularized hinge loss in Rigaill et al, Proc ICML 2013. However, the regression tree algorithm presented in this work is not limited to modeling linear patterns as the L1-regularized linear models in Rigaill et al. For training the non linear tree model, a sequence of convex optimization subproblems are optimally solved in log-linear time by Dynamic Programming (DP). The new maximum margin interval tree (MMIT) algorithm is compared with state-of-the-art margin-based and non-margin-based methods in several real and simulated datasets.
Maximum Margin Interval Trees
Alexandre Drouin, Toby Hocking, Francois Laviolette
Learning a regression function using censored or interval-valued output data is an important problem in fields such as genomics and medicine. The goal is to learn a real-valued prediction function, and the training output labels indicate an interval of possible values. Whereas most existing algorithms for this task are linear models, in this paper we investigate learning nonlinear tree models. We propose to learn a tree by minimizing a margin-based discriminative objective function, and we provide a dynamic programming algorithm for computing the optimal solution in log-linear time. We show empirically that this algorithm achieves state-of-the-art speed and prediction accuracy in a benchmark of several data sets.
- North America > Canada > Quebec > Montreal (0.28)
- North America > United States > Iowa (0.04)
- North America > United States > California > Los Angeles County > Long Beach (0.04)
Maximum Margin Interval Trees
Drouin, Alexandre, Hocking, Toby, Laviolette, Francois
Learning a regression function using censored or interval-valued output data is an important problem in fields such as genomics and medicine. The goal is to learn a real-valued prediction function, and the training output labels indicate an interval of possible values. Whereas most existing algorithms for this task are linear models, in this paper we investigate learning nonlinear tree models. We propose to learn a tree by minimizing a margin-based discriminative objective function, and we provide a dynamic programming algorithm for computing the optimal solution in log-linear time. We show empirically that this algorithm achieves state-of-the-art speed and prediction accuracy in a benchmark of several data sets.
Maximum Margin Interval Trees
Drouin, Alexandre, Hocking, Toby, Laviolette, Francois
Learning a regression function using censored or interval-valued output data is an important problem in fields such as genomics and medicine. The goal is to learn a real-valued prediction function, and the training output labels indicate an interval of possible values. Whereas most existing algorithms for this task are linear models, in this paper we investigate learning nonlinear tree models. We propose to learn a tree by minimizing a margin-based discriminative objective function, and we provide a dynamic programming algorithm for computing the optimal solution in log-linear time. We show empirically that this algorithm achieves state-of-the-art speed and prediction accuracy in a benchmark of several data sets.
- North America > Canada > Quebec > Montreal (0.14)
- North America > United States > Iowa (0.04)
- North America > United States > California > Los Angeles County > Long Beach (0.04)
Maximum Margin Interval Trees
Drouin, Alexandre, Hocking, Toby Dylan, Laviolette, François
Learning a regression function using censored or interval-valued output data is an important problem in fields such as genomics and medicine. The goal is to learn a real-valued prediction function, and the training output labels indicate an interval of possible values. Whereas most existing algorithms for this task are linear models, in this paper we investigate learning nonlinear tree models. We propose to learn a tree by minimizing a margin-based discriminative objective function, and we provide a dynamic programming algorithm for computing the optimal solution in log-linear time. We show empirically that this algorithm achieves state-of-the-art speed and prediction accuracy in a benchmark of several data sets.
- North America > Canada > Quebec > Montreal (0.14)
- North America > United States > Iowa (0.04)
- North America > United States > California > Los Angeles County > Long Beach (0.04)