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Multiclassifier Systems: Back to the Future

Multiclassifier Systems: Back to the Future. Joydeep Ghosh The University of Texas at Austin. Agenda. MCS at crossroads Even part of SAS,….. but what’s next? Historical Tidbits Selected (old) highlights Themes worth re-visiting Broadening the scope Combining multiple clusterings

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Multiclassifier Systems: Back to the Future

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  1. Multiclassifier Systems: Back to the Future Joydeep Ghosh The University of Texas at Austin Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  2. Agenda • MCS at crossroads • Even part of SAS,….. but what’s next? • Historical Tidbits • Selected (old) highlights • Themes worth re-visiting • Broadening the scope • Combining multiple clusterings • Knowledge transfer/reuse • Exploiting output space • Limits to performance, confidences, added classes,… • Modular approaches revisited Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  3. Combining Votes/Ranks • Roots in French revolution? • Jean-Claude de Borda, 1781 • Condorcet’s rule, 1785 • Duncan Black (1958): Condorcet then Borda • Condorcet’s Jury Theorem, 1785 • Social choice functions or group consensus functions • Arrow’s impossibility theorem (1963) • Even 3 classes can be problematic  Did not have “true class” • Linear opinion pool: Laplace Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  4. Multi-class Winner-Take All • Selfridge’s PANDEMONUIM (1958) • Ensembles of specialized demons • Hierarchy: Data, computational and cognitive demons • Decision : pick demon that “shouted the loudest” • Hill climbing; re-constituting useless demons, …. • Nilsson’s Committee Machine (1965) • Pick max of C linear discriminant functions: g i (X) = Wi T X + wi0 Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  5. Hybrid PR in the 70’s and 80’s Theory:“No single model exists for all pattern recognition problems and no single technique is applicable to all problems. Rather what we have is a bag of tools and a bag of problems” Kanal, 1974 Practice:multimodal inputs; multiple representations,… • Syntactic + structural + statistical approaches (Bunke 86) • multistage models: • progressively identify/reject subset of classes • invoke KNN if linear classifier is ambiguous • Combining multiple output types: 0/1; [0,1],… • Designs were typically specific to application Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  6. Combining in Other Areas PR/Vision: Data /sensor/decision fusion AI: evidence combination (Barnett 81) Econometrics: combining estimators (Granger 89) Engineering: Non-linear control Statistics: model-mix methods, Bayesian Model Averaging,.. Software: diversity …. Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  7. mid 90’s-: Competing vs. Cooperating Models Final Decision Feedback Confidence, ROC, Combiner Classification/ Regression Model 1 Model n Model 2 Data, Knowledge, Sensors,… • Less diversity nowadays?? Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  8. Motivation for Modular Networks (Sharkey 97) • More interpretable localized models (Divide and conquer) • Incorporate prior knowledge • Better modeling of inverse problems, discontinuous maps, switched time series, .. • Future (localized) modifications • Neurobiological plausibility Varieties: Cooperative, successive, supervisory,.. Automatic or explicit decomposition • Progress in MCS: • Local selection (Woods et al 97); • dynamic classifiers (Giacinto & Roli, 00) Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  9. DARPA Sonar Transients Classification Program (1989-) J. Ghosh, S. Beck and L. Deuser, IEEE Jl. of Ocean Engineering, Vol 17, No. 4, October 1992, pp. 351-363. Ave/median/.. MLP . . . RBF . . . Classifer N FFT Gabor Wavelets . . . Feature Set M Pre-processsed Data from Observed Phenomenon Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  10. Ensembles: Insights and Lessons (Ho, MCS 2001) Additional Observations • Coverage Optimization: • Bagging/arcing/.. Most popular in machine learning and neural network communities! • sweet spot in training data set size • Decision Optimization: • Usually simple averaging adequate (Kittler et al, 96,98) • Highly correlated outputs • Diversity from feature and classifier choices more effective than diversity from samples/training Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  11. Cluster Ensembles • Given a set of provisional partitionings, we want to aggregate them into a single consensus partitioning, even without access to original features . (individual cluster labels) Clusterer #1 (consensus labels) Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  12. Cluster Ensemble Problem • Let there be r clusterings (r) with k(r) clusters each • What is the integrated clustering  that optimally summarizes the r given clusterings using k clusters? Much more difficult than Classification ensembles Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  13. Application Scenarios • Improve quality and robustness • Reduce variance • Good results on a wide range of data using a diverse portfolio of algorithms • Knowledge reuse • Consolidate legacy clusterings where original object descriptions are no longer available • Distributed Clustering (one clusterer/ node) • Only some features available per clusterer • Only some objects available per clusterer • Hybrids Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  14. Average Norm. Mutual Info. (ANMI) • Normalized mutual information between clusterings a, b • Other normalizations, e.g. using geometric mean, possible • Proposed: Optimal k consensus clustering • Empirical validation Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  15. Designing a Consensus Function • Direct optimization – impractical • Three efficient heuristics • Cluster-based Similarity Partitioning Alg. (CSPA) • O( n2 k r) • HyperGraph Partitioning Alg. (HGPA) • O( n k r) • Meta-Clustering Alg. (MCLA) • O( n k2 r2) All 3 exploit a hypergraph representation of the sets of cluster labels (input to consensus function) See AAAI 2002 paper for details. • Supra-consensus function : performs allthree andpicks the one with highest ANMI (fully unsupervised) Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  16. Hypergraph Representation • One hyperedge/cluster • Example: Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  17. Applications and Experiments • Data-sets • 2-dimensional bi-modal Gaussian simulated data(k=2, d=2, n=1000) • 5 Gaussians in 8-dimensions (k=5, d=8, n=1000) • Pen digit data (k=3, d=4, n=7494) • Yahoo news web-document data (k=40, d=2903, n=2340) • application setups • Robust Consensus Clustering (RCC) • Feature Distributed Clustering (FDC) Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  18. Robust Consensus Clustering (RCC) • Goal: Create an `auto-focus´ clusterer that works for a wide variety of data-sets • Diverse portfolio of 10 approaches • SOM, HGP • GP (Eucl, Corr, Cosi, XJac) • KM (Eucl, Corr, Cosi, XJac) • Each approach is run on the same subsample of the data and the 10 clusterings combined using our supra-consensus function • Evaluation using increase in NMI of supra-consensus results increase over Random Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  19. Robustness Summary • Avg.qualityversusensemblequality • For severalsamplesizes n(50,100,200,400,800) • 10-fold exp. • ±1 standarddeviation bars Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  20. Feature-Distributed Clustering (FDC) Federated cluster analysis with partial feature views • Experimental scenario • Portfolio of r clusterers receiving random subset of features for all objects • Approach • identical individual clustering algorithm (graph partitioning) and same k • Use supra-consensus function for combining • Evaluation • NMI of consensus with category labels Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  21. FDC Example • Data: 5 Gaussians in 8 dimensions • Experiment: 5 clusterings in 2-dimensional subspaces • Result: Avg. ind. 0.70, best ind. 0.77, ensemble 0.99 Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  22. Experimental Results FDC • Reference clustering and consensus clustering • Ensemble always equal or better than individual: • More than double the avg. individual quality in YAHOO! Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  23. Remarks • Cluster ensembles • Improve quality & robustness • Enable knowledge reuse • Work with distributed data • Are yet largely unexplored • Future work • Soft in/output clusterings • What if (some) Features are known? • Bioinformatics • Papers, data, demos & code at http://strehl.com/ Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  24. Solving Related Classification Problems • Real-world problems are often not isolated • History: • Compound decision theory (Abend, 68) 90s: Life-long learning, learning to learn, … (Pratt, Thrun,..) Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  25. Classifier j Classifier i Size Color Shape Knowledge transfer or reuse • Leveraging a set of previously existing solutions for (possibly) related problems • Scarce new data  prior knowledge Grapefruit / Pear Orange / Apple Existing SUPPORT Knowledge Transfer TARGET Size Color Shape Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  26. Supra-Classifier Architecture K. Bollacker and J. Ghosh, "Knowledge reuse in multiclassifier systems", Pattern Recognition Letters, 18 (11-13), Nov 1997, 1385-90. Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  27. Output Space Decomposition History: • Pandemonium, committee machine • “1 class vs. all others” • Pairwise classification (how to combine?) • Limited • Application specific solutions (80’s) • Error correcting output coding (Dietterich & Bakhiri, 95) +ve: # of meta-classifiers can be less; can tailor features -ve : groupings may be forced • Desired: a general framework for natural grouping of classes • Hierarchical with variable resolution • Custom features Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  28. Hierarchical Grouping of Classes • Top down: Solve 3 coupled problems • group classes into two meta-classes • design feaure extractor tailored for the 2 meta-classes (e.g. Fisher) • design the 2-metaclass classifier (Bayesian) • Solution using Deterministic Annealing : • Softly associate each class with both partitions • Compute/update the most discriminating features • Update associations; • For hard associations: also lower temperature • Recurse • Fast convergence, computation at macro-level Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  29. Binary Hierarchical Classifier • Building the tree: • Bottom-Up • Top-Down • Hard & soft variants • Provides valuable domain knowledge • Simplified feature extraction at each stage Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  30. The Future: Scaling to Large, Non-Stationary Datasets • Can build a knowledge base of • discriminating features • Typical class pairings • More amenable to changing mix of classes, changing class statistics • Integrate with semi-supervised learning methods Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  31. Re-visiting Mixtures of Experts (MoEs) • Hierarchical versions possible Expert 1 y1 g1(x) Y(x) =  gi(x)yi (x) Expert 2  y2 g2 x … yk Expert K gk … Gating Network Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  32. Beyond Mixtures of Experts • Problems with soft-max based gating network • Alternative: use normalized Gaussians • Structurally adaptive: add/delete experts • on-line learning versions • hard vs. soft switching; error bars, etc • Piaget’s assimilation & accomodation V. Ramamurti and J. Ghosh, "Structurally Adaptive Modular Networks for Non-Stationary Environments", IEEE Trans. Neural Networks, 10(1), Jan 1999, pp. 152-60. Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  33. Generalizing MoE models • Mixtures of X • X = HMMs, factor models, trees, principal components… • State dependent gating networks • Sequence classification • Mixture of Kalman Filters • Outperformed NASA’s McGill filter bank! W. S. Chaer, R. H. Bishop and J. Ghosh, "Hierarchical Adaptive Kalman Filtering for Interplanetary Orbit Determination", IEEE Trans. on Aerospace and Electronic Systems, 34(3), Aug 1998, pp. 883-896. Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  34. Some Directions for MCS Extend to “Multi-learner systems” Develop a Meta-theory based on data properties - for Classification: Catering to changing statistics and changing questions (“concept drift”) Maintaining explainability (cf. Brieman’s constant) Classification of sequences Online evidence accumulation distributed data mining and scalability issues Active learning Implications for feature selection Computational aspects Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

  35. Acknowledgements: Completed PhD theses: Alexander Strehl, (cluster ensembles), May 02 Shailesh Kumar, “Modular Learning Through Output Space Transformations”, 2000 Viswanath Ramamurti, Modular Networks, 1997 Kurt D. Bollacker, “A Supra-Classifier Framework for Knowledge Reuse”, 1998 Kagan Tumer, math analysis of ensembles, 1996 Ismail Taha, symbolic + connectionist, 1997 Papers at: http://www.lans.ece.utexas.edu Joydeep Ghosh UT-ECE

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