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Demand-Driven Associative Classification [electronic resource] / by Adriano Veloso, Wagner Meira Jr.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: SpringerBriefs in Computer SciencePublisher: London : Springer London, 2011Description: XIII, 112p. 27 illus. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780857295255
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 006.312 23
LOC classification:
  • QA76.9.D343
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction and Preliminaries -- Introduction -- The Classification Problem -- Associative Classification -- Demand-Driven Associative Classification -- Extensions to Associative Classification -- Multi-Label Associative Classification -- Competence-Conscious Associative Classification -- Calibrated Associative Classification -- Self-Training Associative Classification -- Ordinal Regression and Ranking --  Conclusions and FutureWork.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The ultimate goal of machines is to help humans to solve problems. Such problems range between two extremes: structured problems for which the solution is totally defined (and thus are easily programmed by humans), and random problems for which the solution is completely undefined (and thus cannot be programmed). Problems in the vast middle ground have solutions that cannot be well defined and are, thus, inherently hard to program. Machine Learning is the way to handle this vast middle ground, so that many tedious and difficult hand-coding tasks would be replaced by automatic learning methods. There are several machine learning tasks, and this work is focused on a major one, which is known as classification. Some classification problems are hard to solve, but we show that they can be decomposed into much simpler sub-problems. We also show that independently solving these sub-problems by taking into account their particular demands, often leads to improved classification performance.
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E-Book E-Book Central Library Available E-38299

Introduction and Preliminaries -- Introduction -- The Classification Problem -- Associative Classification -- Demand-Driven Associative Classification -- Extensions to Associative Classification -- Multi-Label Associative Classification -- Competence-Conscious Associative Classification -- Calibrated Associative Classification -- Self-Training Associative Classification -- Ordinal Regression and Ranking --  Conclusions and FutureWork.

The ultimate goal of machines is to help humans to solve problems. Such problems range between two extremes: structured problems for which the solution is totally defined (and thus are easily programmed by humans), and random problems for which the solution is completely undefined (and thus cannot be programmed). Problems in the vast middle ground have solutions that cannot be well defined and are, thus, inherently hard to program. Machine Learning is the way to handle this vast middle ground, so that many tedious and difficult hand-coding tasks would be replaced by automatic learning methods. There are several machine learning tasks, and this work is focused on a major one, which is known as classification. Some classification problems are hard to solve, but we show that they can be decomposed into much simpler sub-problems. We also show that independently solving these sub-problems by taking into account their particular demands, often leads to improved classification performance.

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