515 research outputs found
Coresets-Methods and History: A Theoreticians Design Pattern for Approximation and Streaming Algorithms
We present a technical survey on the state of the art approaches in data reduction and the coreset framework. These include geometric decompositions, gradient methods, random sampling, sketching and random projections. We further outline their importance for the design of streaming algorithms and give a brief overview on lower bounding techniques
On Approximating the Riemannian 1-Center
International audienceIn this paper, we generalize the simple Euclidean 1-center approximation algorithm of Badoiu and Clarkson (2003) to Riemannian geometries and study accordingly the convergence rate. We then show how to instantiate this generic algorithm to two particular cases: (1) hyperbolic geometry, and (2) Riemannian manifold of symmetric positive definite matrices
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
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