Events Calendar

DSAS - PhD Public Lecture - Xin Liu

Date:
Tuesday, November 7, 2017
Time:
9:30 am
Location:
International and Graduate Affairs Building
Room: 1N75
Cost:
Free

Speaker: Xin Liu

Title: Data-Adaptive Kernel Support Vector Machine

Abstract:  In this thesis, we propose the data-adaptive kernel SVM, a new method with a data-driven scaling kernel function based on real data sets. This two-stage approach of kernel function scaling can enhance the accuracy of a support vector machine, especially when the data are imbalanced. Followed by the standard SVM procedure in the first stage, the proposed method locally adapts the kernel function to data locations base on the skewness of the class outcomes. In the second stage, the decision rule is constructed with the data-adaptive kernel function and is used as the classifier. This process enlarges the magnification effect directly on the Riemannian manifold within the feature space rather than the input space. The proposed data-adaptive kernel SVM technique is applied in the binary case, and is extended to the multi-class situations when imbalance of outcomes is a main concern. We conduct extensive simulation studies to assess the performance of the proposed methods, and the prostate cancer image study is employed as an illustration.
The data-adaptive kernel is further applied in feature selection process. We propose the data-adaptive kernel-penalized SVM, a new method of simultaneous feature selection and classification by penalizing data-adaptive kernels in SVMs. Instead of penalizing the standard cost function of SVMs in the usual way, the penalty will be directly added to the dual objective function that contains the data-adaptive kernel. Classification results with sparse features selected can be obtained simultaneously. Different penalty terms in the data-adaptive kernel-penalized SVM will be compared. The oracle property of the estimator is examined. We conduct extensive simulation studies to assess the performance of all the proposed methods, and employ the method on a breast cancer data set as an illustration.

Supervisor: Wenqing He

Contact:
Erin Woolnough
ewoolno@uwo.ca
Event Type:


Powered by Blackbaud
nonprofit software