Authors
Eric Xing, Michael Jordan, Stuart J Russell, Andrew Ng
Publication date
2002
Journal
Advances in neural information processing systems
Volume
15
Description
Many algorithms rely critically on being given a good metric over their inputs. For instance, data can often be clustered in many “plausible” ways, and if a clustering algorithm such as K-means initially fails to find one that is meaningful to a user, the only recourse may be for the user to manually tweak the metric until sufficiently good clusters are found. For these and other applications requiring good metrics, it is desirable that we provide a more systematic way for users to indicate what they consider “similar.” For instance, we may ask them to provide examples. In this paper, we present an algorithm that, given examples of similar (and, if desired, dissimilar) pairs of points in вдг, learns a distance metric over вег that respects these relationships. Our method is based on posing metric learning as a convex optimization problem, which allows us to give efficient, local-optima-free algorithms. We also demonstrate empirically that the learned metrics can be used to significantly improve clustering performance.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
E Xing, M Jordan, SJ Russell, A Ng - Advances in neural information processing systems, 2002