Carnegie Mellon University
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Paired Sampling in Density-Sensitive Active Learning

journal contribution
posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00 authored by Pinar Donmez, Jaime G. Carbonell

Active learning consists of principled on-line sampling over unlabeled data to optimize supervised learning rates as a function of the number of labels requested from an external oracle. A new sampling technique for active learning is developed based on two key principles: 1) Balanced sampling on both sides of the decision boundary is more effective than sampling one side disproportionately, and 2) exploiting the natural grouping (clustering) of unlabeled data establishes a more meaningful non-Euclidean distance function with respect to estimated category membership. Our new paired-sampling density-sensitive method embodying these principles yields significantly superior performance in multiple active learning data sets over all other sampling methods in our comparative study: representative sampling, uncertainty sampling, density-based sampling, and random sampling.

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2008-01-01

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