stream-based active learning
Budgeted stream-based active learning via adaptive submodular maximization
Active learning enables us to reduce the annotation cost by adaptively selecting unlabeled instances to be labeled. For pool-based active learning, several effective methods with theoretical guarantees have been developed through maximizing some utility function satisfying adaptive submodularity. In contrast, there have been few methods for stream-based active learning based on adaptive submodularity. In this paper, we propose a new class of utility functions, policy-adaptive submodular functions, and prove this class includes many existing adaptive submodular functions appearing in real world problems. We provide a general framework based on policy-adaptive submodularity that makes it possible to convert existing pool-based methods to stream-based methods and give theoretical guarantees on their performance. In addition we empirically demonstrate their effectiveness comparing with existing heuristics on common benchmark datasets.
Budgeted stream-based active learning via adaptive submodular maximization
Active learning enables us to reduce the annotation cost by adaptively selecting unlabeled instances to be labeled. For pool-based active learning, several effective methods with theoretical guarantees have been developed through maximizing some utility function satisfying adaptive submodularity. In contrast, there have been few methods for stream-based active learning based on adaptive submodularity. In this paper, we propose a new class of utility functions, policy-adaptive submodular functions, and prove this class includes many existing adaptive submodular functions appearing in real world problems. We provide a general framework based on policy-adaptive submodularity that makes it possible to convert existing pool-based methods to stream-based methods and give theoretical guarantees on their performance. In addition we empirically demonstrate their effectiveness comparing with existing heuristics on common benchmark datasets.
- Asia > Japan > Honshū > Kansai > Kyoto Prefecture > Kyoto (0.05)
- North America > United States > Wisconsin (0.04)
- Europe > Spain > Catalonia > Barcelona Province > Barcelona (0.04)
Budgeted stream-based active learning via adaptive submodular maximization
Active learning enables us to reduce the annotation cost by adaptively selecting unlabeled instances to be labeled. For pool-based active learning, several effective methods with theoretical guarantees have been developed through maximizing some utility function satisfying adaptive submodularity. In contrast, there have been few methods for stream-based active learning based on adaptive submodularity. In this paper, we propose a new class of utility functions, policy-adaptive submodular functions, which includes many existing adaptive submodular functions appearing in real world problems. We provide a general framework based on policy-adaptive submodularity that makes it possible to convert existing poolbased methods to stream-based methods and give theoretical guarantees on their performance. In addition we empirically demonstrate their effectiveness by comparing with existing heuristics on common benchmark datasets.
- Asia > Japan > Honshū > Kansai > Kyoto Prefecture > Kyoto (0.05)
- North America > United States > Wisconsin (0.04)
- Europe > Spain > Catalonia > Barcelona Province > Barcelona (0.04)
Stream-based active learning with linear models
Cacciarelli, Davide, Kulahci, Murat, Tyssedal, John Sølve
The proliferation of automated data collection schemes and the advances in sensorics are increasing the amount of data we are able to monitor in real-time. However, given the high annotation costs and the time required by quality inspections, data is often available in an unlabeled form. This is fostering the use of active learning for the development of soft sensors and predictive models. In production, instead of performing random inspections to obtain product information, labels are collected by evaluating the information content of the unlabeled data. Several query strategy frameworks for regression have been proposed in the literature but most of the focus has been dedicated to the static pool-based scenario. In this work, we propose a new strategy for the stream-based scenario, where instances are sequentially offered to the learner, which must instantaneously decide whether to perform the quality check to obtain the label or discard the instance. The approach is inspired by the optimal experimental design theory and the iterative aspect of the decision-making process is tackled by setting a threshold on the informativeness of the unlabeled data points. The proposed approach is evaluated using numerical simulations and the Tennessee Eastman Process simulator. The results confirm that selecting the examples suggested by the proposed algorithm allows for a faster reduction in the prediction error.
- North America > United States > Tennessee (0.25)
- Europe > Sweden (0.14)
- Europe > Denmark (0.14)
- (2 more...)
Stream-based Active Learning with Verification Latency in Non-stationary Environments
Castellani, Andrea, Schmitt, Sebastian, Hammer, Barbara
Data stream classification is an important problem in the field of machine learning. Due to the non-stationary nature of the data where the underlying distribution changes over time (concept drift), the model needs to continuously adapt to new data statistics. Stream-based Active Learning (AL) approaches address this problem by interactively querying a human expert to provide new data labels for the most recent samples, within a limited budget. Existing AL strategies assume that labels are immediately available, while in a real-world scenario the expert requires time to provide a queried label (verification latency), and by the time the requested labels arrive they may not be relevant anymore. In this article, we investigate the influence of finite, time-variable, and unknown verification delay, in the presence of concept drift on AL approaches. We propose PRopagate (PR), a latency independent utility estimator which also predicts the requested, but not yet known, labels. Furthermore, we propose a drift-dependent dynamic budget strategy, which uses a variable distribution of the labelling budget over time, after a detected drift. Thorough experimental evaluation, with both synthetic and real-world non-stationary datasets, and different settings of verification latency and budget are conducted and analyzed. We empirically show that the proposed method consistently outperforms the state-of-the-art. Additionally, we demonstrate that with variable budget allocation in time, it is possible to boost the performance of AL strategies, without increasing the overall labeling budget.
Annotation Cost Reduction of Stream-based Active Learning by Automated Weak Labeling using a Robot Arm
Suzuki, Kanata, Sunagawa, Taro, Sasaki, Tomotake, Katoh, Takashi
Stream-based active learning (AL) is an efficient training data collection method, and it is used to reduce human annotation cost required in machine learning. However, it is difficult to say that the human cost is low enough because most previous studies have assumed that an oracle is a human with domain knowledge. In this study, we propose a method to replace a part of the oracle's work in stream-based AL by self-training with weak labeling using a robot arm. A camera attached to a robot arm takes a series of image data related to a streamed object, which should have the same label. We use this information as a weak label to connect a pseudo-label (estimated class label) and a target instance. Our method selects two data from a series of image data; high confidence data for correcting pseudo-labels and low confidence data for improving the performance of the classifier. We paired a pseudo-label provided to high confidence data with a target instance (low confidence data). By using this technique, we mitigate the inefficiency in self-training, that is, difficulty in creating pseudo-labeled training data with a high impact on the target classifier. In the experiments, we employed the proposed method in the classification task of objects on a belt conveyor. We evaluated the performance against human cost on multiple scenarios considering the temporal variation of data. The proposed method achieves the same or better performance as the conventional methods while reducing human cost.
Budgeted stream-based active learning via adaptive submodular maximization
Fujii, Kaito, Kashima, Hisashi
Active learning enables us to reduce the annotation cost by adaptively selecting unlabeled instances to be labeled. For pool-based active learning, several effective methods with theoretical guarantees have been developed through maximizing some utility function satisfying adaptive submodularity. In contrast, there have been few methods for stream-based active learning based on adaptive submodularity. In this paper, we propose a new class of utility functions, policy-adaptive submodular functions, and prove this class includes many existing adaptive submodular functions appearing in real world problems. We provide a general framework based on policy-adaptive submodularity that makes it possible to convert existing pool-based methods to stream-based methods and give theoretical guarantees on their performance. In addition we empirically demonstrate their effectiveness comparing with existing heuristics on common benchmark datasets.
Budgeted stream-based active learning via adaptive submodular maximization
Fujii, Kaito, Kashima, Hisashi
Active learning enables us to reduce the annotation cost by adaptively selecting unlabeled instances to be labeled. For pool-based active learning, several effective methods with theoretical guarantees have been developed through maximizing some utility function satisfying adaptive submodularity. In contrast, there have been few methods for stream-based active learning based on adaptive submodularity. In this paper, we propose a new class of utility functions, policy-adaptive submodular functions, and prove this class includes many existing adaptive submodular functions appearing in real world problems. We provide a general framework based on policy-adaptive submodularity that makes it possible to convert existing pool-based methods to stream-based methods and give theoretical guarantees on their performance. In addition we empirically demonstrate their effectiveness comparing with existing heuristics on common benchmark datasets.
- Asia > Japan > Honshū > Kansai > Kyoto Prefecture > Kyoto (0.05)
- North America > United States > Wisconsin (0.04)
- Europe > Spain > Catalonia > Barcelona Province > Barcelona (0.04)