DocumentCode
3812907
Title
Probabilistic Classification Vector Machines
Author
Huanhuan Chen;Peter Tino;Xin Yao
Author_Institution
Centre of Excellence for Res. in Comput. Intell. & Applic. (CERCIA), Univ. of Birmingham, Birmingham
Volume
20
Issue
6
fYear
2009
Firstpage
901
Lastpage
914
Abstract
In this paper, a sparse learning algorithm, probabilistic classification vector machines (PCVMs), is proposed. We analyze relevance vector machines (RVMs) for classification problems and observe that adopting the same prior for different classes may lead to unstable solutions. In order to tackle this problem, a signed and truncated Gaussian prior is adopted over every weight in PCVMs, where the sign of prior is determined by the class label, i.e., +1 or -1. The truncated Gaussian prior not only restricts the sign of weights but also leads to a sparse estimation of weight vectors, and thus controls the complexity of the model. In PCVMs, the kernel parameters can be optimized simultaneously within the training algorithm. The performance of PCVMs is extensively evaluated on four synthetic data sets and 13 benchmark data sets using three performance metrics, error rate (ERR), area under the curve of receiver operating characteristic (AUC), and root mean squared error (RMSE). We compare PCVMs with soft-margin support vector machines (SVMSoft), hard-margin support vector machines (SVMHard), SVM with the kernel parameters optimized by PCVMs (SVMPCVM), relevance vector machines (RVMs), and some other baseline classifiers. Through five replications of twofold cross-validation F test, i.e., 5 times 2 cross-validation F test, over single data sets and Friedman test with the corresponding post-hoc test to compare these algorithms over multiple data sets, we notice that PCVMs outperform other algorithms, including SVMSoft, SVMHard, RVM, and SVMPCVM, on most of the data sets under the three metrics, especially under AUC. Our results also reveal that the performance of SVMPCVM is slightly better than SVMSoft, implying that the parameter optimization algorithm in PCVMs is better than cross validation in terms of performance and computational complexity. In this paper, we also discuss the superiority of PCVMs´ formulation using maximum a posteriori (MAP) analysis and margin analysis, which explain the empirical success of PCVMs.
Keywords
"Support vector machines","Support vector machine classification","Kernel","Testing","Predictive models","Machine learning","Classification algorithms","Measurement","Error analysis","Machine learning algorithms"
Journal_Title
IEEE Transactions on Neural Networks
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1045-9227
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNN.2009.2014161
Filename
4840491
Link To Document