57,979 research outputs found
Nonparallel support vector machines for pattern classification
We propose a novel nonparallel classifier, called nonparallel support vector machine (NPSVM), for binary classification. Our NPSVM that is fully different from the existing nonparallel classifiers, such as the generalized eigenvalue proximal support vector machine (GEPSVM) and the twin support vector machine (TWSVM), has several incomparable advantages: 1) two primal problems are constructed implementing the structural risk minimization principle; 2) the dual problems of these two primal problems have the same advantages as that of the standard SVMs, so that the kernel trick can be applied directly, while existing TWSVMs have to construct another two primal problems for nonlinear cases based on the approximate kernel-generated surfaces, furthermore, their nonlinear problems cannot degenerate to the linear case even the linear kernel is used; 3) the dual problems have the same elegant formulation with that of standard SVMs and can certainly be solved efficiently by sequential minimization optimization algorithm, while existing GEPSVM or TWSVMs are not suitable for large scale problems; 4) it has the inherent sparseness as standard SVMs; 5) existing TWSVMs are only the special cases of the NPSVM when the parameters of which are appropriately chosen. Experimental results on lots of datasets show the effectiveness of our method in both sparseness and classification accuracy, and therefore, confirm the above conclusion further. In some sense, our NPSVM is a new starting point of nonparallel classifiers
Training Support Vector Machines Using Frank-Wolfe Optimization Methods
Training a Support Vector Machine (SVM) requires the solution of a quadratic
programming problem (QP) whose computational complexity becomes prohibitively
expensive for large scale datasets. Traditional optimization methods cannot be
directly applied in these cases, mainly due to memory restrictions.
By adopting a slightly different objective function and under mild conditions
on the kernel used within the model, efficient algorithms to train SVMs have
been devised under the name of Core Vector Machines (CVMs). This framework
exploits the equivalence of the resulting learning problem with the task of
building a Minimal Enclosing Ball (MEB) problem in a feature space, where data
is implicitly embedded by a kernel function.
In this paper, we improve on the CVM approach by proposing two novel methods
to build SVMs based on the Frank-Wolfe algorithm, recently revisited as a fast
method to approximate the solution of a MEB problem. In contrast to CVMs, our
algorithms do not require to compute the solutions of a sequence of
increasingly complex QPs and are defined by using only analytic optimization
steps. Experiments on a large collection of datasets show that our methods
scale better than CVMs in most cases, sometimes at the price of a slightly
lower accuracy. As CVMs, the proposed methods can be easily extended to machine
learning problems other than binary classification. However, effective
classifiers are also obtained using kernels which do not satisfy the condition
required by CVMs and can thus be used for a wider set of problems
Optimal Radiometric Calibration for Camera-Display Communication
We present a novel method for communicating between a camera and display by
embedding and recovering hidden and dynamic information within a displayed
image. A handheld camera pointed at the display can receive not only the
display image, but also the underlying message. These active scenes are
fundamentally different from traditional passive scenes like QR codes because
image formation is based on display emittance, not surface reflectance.
Detecting and decoding the message requires careful photometric modeling for
computational message recovery. Unlike standard watermarking and steganography
methods that lie outside the domain of computer vision, our message recovery
algorithm uses illumination to optically communicate hidden messages in real
world scenes. The key innovation of our approach is an algorithm that performs
simultaneous radiometric calibration and message recovery in one convex
optimization problem. By modeling the photometry of the system using a
camera-display transfer function (CDTF), we derive a physics-based kernel
function for support vector machine classification. We demonstrate that our
method of optimal online radiometric calibration (OORC) leads to an efficient
and robust algorithm for computational messaging between nine commercial
cameras and displays.Comment: 10 pages, Submitted to CVPR 201
Brain image clustering by wavelet energy and CBSSO optimization algorithm
Previously, the diagnosis of brain abnormality was significantly important in the saving of social and hospital resources. Wavelet energy is known as an effective feature detection which has great efficiency in different utilities. This paper suggests a new method based on wavelet energy to automatically classify magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain images into two groups (normal and abnormal), utilizing support vector machine (SVM) classification based on chaotic binary shark smell optimization (CBSSO) to optimize the SVM weights.
The results of the suggested CBSSO-based KSVM are compared favorably to several other methods in terms of better sensitivity and authenticity. The proposed CAD system can additionally be utilized to categorize the images with various pathological conditions, types, and illness modes
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