16,728 research outputs found
Evolving Ensemble Fuzzy Classifier
The concept of ensemble learning offers a promising avenue in learning from
data streams under complex environments because it addresses the bias and
variance dilemma better than its single model counterpart and features a
reconfigurable structure, which is well suited to the given context. While
various extensions of ensemble learning for mining non-stationary data streams
can be found in the literature, most of them are crafted under a static base
classifier and revisits preceding samples in the sliding window for a
retraining step. This feature causes computationally prohibitive complexity and
is not flexible enough to cope with rapidly changing environments. Their
complexities are often demanding because it involves a large collection of
offline classifiers due to the absence of structural complexities reduction
mechanisms and lack of an online feature selection mechanism. A novel evolving
ensemble classifier, namely Parsimonious Ensemble pENsemble, is proposed in
this paper. pENsemble differs from existing architectures in the fact that it
is built upon an evolving classifier from data streams, termed Parsimonious
Classifier pClass. pENsemble is equipped by an ensemble pruning mechanism,
which estimates a localized generalization error of a base classifier. A
dynamic online feature selection scenario is integrated into the pENsemble.
This method allows for dynamic selection and deselection of input features on
the fly. pENsemble adopts a dynamic ensemble structure to output a final
classification decision where it features a novel drift detection scenario to
grow the ensemble structure. The efficacy of the pENsemble has been numerically
demonstrated through rigorous numerical studies with dynamic and evolving data
streams where it delivers the most encouraging performance in attaining a
tradeoff between accuracy and complexity.Comment: this paper has been published by IEEE Transactions on Fuzzy System
Active Collaborative Ensemble Tracking
A discriminative ensemble tracker employs multiple classifiers, each of which
casts a vote on all of the obtained samples. The votes are then aggregated in
an attempt to localize the target object. Such method relies on collective
competence and the diversity of the ensemble to approach the target/non-target
classification task from different views. However, by updating all of the
ensemble using a shared set of samples and their final labels, such diversity
is lost or reduced to the diversity provided by the underlying features or
internal classifiers' dynamics. Additionally, the classifiers do not exchange
information with each other while striving to serve the collective goal, i.e.,
better classification. In this study, we propose an active collaborative
information exchange scheme for ensemble tracking. This, not only orchestrates
different classifier towards a common goal but also provides an intelligent
update mechanism to keep the diversity of classifiers and to mitigate the
shortcomings of one with the others. The data exchange is optimized with regard
to an ensemble uncertainty utility function, and the ensemble is updated via
co-training. The evaluations demonstrate promising results realized by the
proposed algorithm for the real-world online tracking.Comment: AVSS 2017 Submissio
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Dynamic low-level context for the detection of mild traumatic brain injury.
Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) appears as low contrast lesions in magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Standard automated detection approaches cannot detect the subtle changes caused by the lesions. The use of context has become integral for the detection of low contrast objects in images. Context is any information that can be used for object detection but is not directly due to the physical appearance of an object in an image. In this paper, new low-level static and dynamic context features are proposed and integrated into a discriminative voxel-level classifier to improve the detection of mTBI lesions. Visual features, including multiple texture measures, are used to give an initial estimate of a lesion. From the initial estimate novel proximity and directional distance, contextual features are calculated and used as features for another classifier. This feature takes advantage of spatial information given by the initial lesion estimate using only the visual features. Dynamic context is captured by the proposed posterior marginal edge distance context feature, which measures the distance from a hard estimate of the lesion at a previous time point. The approach is validated on a temporal mTBI rat model dataset and shown to have improved dice score and convergence compared to other state-of-the-art approaches. Analysis of feature importance and versatility of the approach on other datasets are also provided
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