loading...
Principled Hybrids of Generative and Discriminative Models
New York, NY June 17-June 22
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/CVPR.2006.2272006 IEEE Computer Society Conference ...
 This Article 
 
PDF
HTML
 
 Share 
   
 Bibliographic References 
   
 Add to: 
 
Digg
Furl
Spurl
Blink
Simpy
Google
Del.icio.us
Y!MyWeb
 
 Search 
   
Julia A. Lasserre, University of Cambridge, UK
Christopher M. Bishop, Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK
Thomas P. Minka, Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK

When labelled training data is plentiful, discriminative techniques are widely used since they give excellent generalization performance. However, for large-scale applications such as object recognition, hand labelling of data is expensive, and there is much interest in semi-supervised techniques based on generative models in which the majority of the training data is unlabelled. Although the generalization performance of generative models can often be improved by ?training them discriminatively?, they can then no longer make use of unlabelled data. In an attempt to gain the benefit of both generative and discriminative approaches, heuristic procedure have been proposed [2, 3] which interpolate between these two extremes by taking a convex combination of the generative and discriminative objective functions.

In this paper we adopt a new perspective which says that there is only one correct way to train a given model, and that a ?discriminatively trained? generative model is fundamentally a new model [7]. From this viewpoint, generative and discriminative models correspond to specific choices for the prior over parameters. As well as giving a principled interpretation of ?discriminative training?, this approach opens door to very general ways of interpolating between generative and discriminative extremes through alternative choices of prior. We illustrate this framework using both synthetic data and a practical example in the domain of multi-class object recognition. Our results show that, when the supply of labelled training data is limited, the optimum performance corresponds to a balance between the purely generative and the purely discriminative.

Citation:
Julia A. Lasserre, Christopher M. Bishop, Thomas P. Minka, "Principled Hybrids of Generative and Discriminative Models," cvpr, vol. 1, pp.87-94, 2006 IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Volume 1 (CVPR'06), 2006
Usage of this product signifies your acceptance of the Terms of Use.