6533b873fe1ef96bd12d5317

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Diversity in Ensemble Feature Selection

Alexey TsymbalPadraig Cunningham

subject

Dynamic integration of classifiersComputingMethodologies_PATTERNRECOGNITIONEnsemble diversityFeature selectionEnsemble of classifiersSearch strategy

description

Ensembles of learnt models constitute one of the main current directions in machine learning and data mining. Ensembles allow us to achieve higher accuracy, which is often not achievable with single models. It was shown theoretically and experimentally that in order for an ensemble to be effective, it should consist of high-accuracy base classifiers that should have high diversity in their predictions. One technique, which proved to be effective for constructing an ensemble of accurate and diverse base classifiers, is to use different feature subsets, or so-called ensemble feature selection. Many ensemble feature selection strategies incorporate diversity as a component of the fitness function in the search for the best collection of feature subsets. There are known a number of ways to quantify diversity in ensembles of classifiers, and little research has been done about their appropriateness to ensemble feature selection. In this paper, we compare seven measures of diversity with regard to their possible use in ensemble feature selection. We conduct experiments on 21 data sets from the UCI machine learning repository, comparing the ensemble accuracy and other characteristics for the ensembles built with ensemble feature selection based on the considered measures of diversity. We consider five search strategies for ensemble feature selection: simple random subsampling, genetic search, hill-climbing, ensemble forward and backward sequential selection. In the experiments, we show that, in some cases, the ensemble feature selection process can be sensitive to the choice of the diversity measure, and that the question of the superiority of a particular measure depends on the context of the use of diversity and on the data being processed.

http://hdl.handle.net/2262/12600