[Seminar] Local overlap reduction procedure for dynamic ensemble selection

The next LIVIA seminar will be held on Thursday, May 19 at 12h00 in hybrid mode.

Title: Local overlap reduction procedure for dynamic ensemble selection
by Mariana A. Souza, Ph.D. candidate at LIVIA

Résumé / Summary: (see paper in attachment)
Class imbalance is a characteristic known for making learning more challenging for classification models as they may end up biased towards the majority class. A promising approach among the ensemble-based methods in the context of imbalance learning is Dynamic Selection (DS). DS techniques single out a subset of the classifiers in the ensemble to label each given unknown sample according to their estimated competence in the area surrounding the query. Because only a small region is taken into account in the selection scheme, the global class disproportion may have less impact over the system’s performance. However, the presence of local class overlap may severely hinder the DS techniques’ performance over imbalanced distributions as it not only exacerbates the effects of the under-representation but also introduces ambiguous and possibly unreliable samples to the competence estimation process. Thus, in this work, we propose a DS technique which attempts to minimize the effects of the local class overlap during the classifier selection procedure. The proposed method iteratively removes from the target region the instance perceived as the hardest to classify until a classifier is deemed competent to label the query sample. The known samples are characterized using instance hardness measures that quantify the local class overlap. Experimental results show that the proposed technique can significantly outperform the baseline as well as several other DS techniques, suggesting its suitability for dealing with class under-representation and overlap. Furthermore, the proposed technique still yielded competitive results when using an under-sampled, less overlapped version of the labelled sets, specially over the problems with a high proportion of minority class samples in overlap areas. Code available at https://github.com/marianaasouza/lords.

* In person: ETS-LIVIA, room A-3600