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JAIR
2000

A Model of Inductive Bias Learning

13 years 11 months ago
A Model of Inductive Bias Learning
A major problem in machine learning is that of inductive bias: how to choose a learner's hypothesis space so that it is large enough to contain a solution to the problem being learnt, yet small enough to ensure reliable generalization from reasonably-sized training sets. Typically such bias is supplied by hand through the skill and insights of experts. In this paper a model for automatically learning bias is investigated. The central assumption of the model is that the learner is embedded within an environment of related learning tasks. Within such an environment the learner can sample from multiple tasks, and hence it can search for a hypothesis space that contains good solutions to many of the problems in the environment. Under certain restrictions on the set of all hypothesis spaces available to the learner, we show that a hypothesis space that performs well on a sufficiently large number of training tasks will also perform well when learning novel tasks in the same environmen...
Jonathan Baxter
Added 18 Dec 2010
Updated 18 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2000
Where JAIR
Authors Jonathan Baxter
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