Título A Study on Multi-Scale Kernel Optimisation via Centered Kernel-Target Alignment
Autores PÉREZ ORTIZ, MARÍA, Gutierrez, P. A. , SÁNCHEZ MONEDERO, JAVIER, Hervas-Martinez, C.
Publicación externa No
Medio Neural Process Letters
Alcance Article
Naturaleza Científica
Cuartil JCR 3
Cuartil SJR 2
Impacto JCR 1.62000
Impacto SJR 0.39900
Web https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84942040031&doi=10.1007%2fs11063-015-9471-0&partnerID=40&md5=f9797a4507ac320702713df1226b6197
Fecha de publicacion 01/10/2016
ISI 000382683300012
Scopus Id 2-s2.0-84942040031
DOI 10.1007/s11063-015-9471-0
Abstract Kernel mapping is one of the most widespread approaches to intrinsically deriving nonlinear classifiers. With the aim of better suiting a given dataset, different kernels have been proposed and different bounds and methodologies have been studied to optimise them. We focus on the optimisation of a multi-scale kernel, where a different width is chosen for each feature. This idea has been barely studied in the literature, although it has been shown to achieve better performance in the presence of heterogeneous attributes. The large number of parameters in multi-scale kernels makes it computationally unaffordable to optimise them by applying traditional cross-validation. Instead, an analytical measure known as centered kernel-target alignment (CKTA) can be used to align the kernel to the so-called ideal kernel matrix. This paper analyses and compares this and other alternatives, providing a review of the literature in kernel optimisation and some insights into the usefulness of multi-scale kernel optimisation via CKTA. When applied to the binary support vector machine paradigm (SVM), the results using 24 datasets show that CKTA with a multi-scale kernel leads to the construction of a well-defined feature space and simpler SVM models, provides an implicit filtering of non-informative features and achieves robust and comparable performance to other methods even when using random initialisations. Finally, we derive some considerations about when a multi-scale approach could be, in general, useful and propose a distance-based initialisation technique for the gradient-ascent method, which shows promising results.
Palabras clave Kernel-target alignment; Kernel methods; Multi-scale kernel; Parameter selection; Support vector machines; Cross-validation
Miembros de la Universidad Loyola

Change your preferences Gestionar cookies