出典(authority):フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』「2014/01/29 11:28:11」(JST)
In machine learning, pattern recognition is the assignment of a label to a given input value. An example of pattern recognition is classification, which attempts to assign each input value to one of a given set of classes (for example, determine whether a given email is "spam" or "non-spam"). However, pattern recognition is a more general problem that encompasses other types of output as well. Other examples are regression, which assigns a real-valued output to each input; sequence labeling, which assigns a class to each member of a sequence of values (for example, part of speech tagging, which assigns a part of speech to each word in an input sentence); and parsing, which assigns a parse tree to an input sentence, describing the syntactic structure of the sentence.
Pattern recognition algorithms generally aim to provide a reasonable answer for all possible inputs and to perform "most likely" matching of the inputs, taking into account their statistical variation. This is opposed to pattern matching algorithms, which look for exact matches in the input with pre-existing patterns. A common example of a pattern-matching algorithm is regular expression matching, which looks for patterns of a given sort in textual data and is included in the search capabilities of many text editors and word processors. In contrast to pattern recognition, pattern matching is generally not considered a type of machine learning, although pattern-matching algorithms (especially with fairly general, carefully tailored patterns) can sometimes succeed in providing similar-quality output to the sort provided by pattern-recognition algorithms.
Pattern recognition is studied in many fields, including psychology, psychiatry, ethology, cognitive science, traffic flow and computer science.
Pattern recognition is generally categorized according to the type of learning procedure used to generate the output value. Supervised learning assumes that a set of training data (the training set) has been provided, consisting of a set of instances that have been properly labeled by hand with the correct output. A learning procedure then generates a model that attempts to meet two sometimes conflicting objectives: Perform as well as possible on the training data, and generalize as well as possible to new data (usually, this means being as simple as possible, for some technical definition of "simple", in accordance with Occam's Razor, discussed below). Unsupervised learning, on the other hand, assumes training data that has not been hand-labeled, and attempts to find inherent patterns in the data that can then be used to determine the correct output value for new data instances. A combination of the two that has recently been explored is semi-supervised learning, which uses a combination of labeled and unlabeled data (typically a small set of labeled data combined with a large amount of unlabeled data). Note that in cases of unsupervised learning, there may be no training data at all to speak of; in other words, the data to be labeled is the training data.
Note that sometimes different terms are used to describe the corresponding supervised and unsupervised learning procedures for the same type of output. For example, the unsupervised equivalent of classification is normally known as clustering, based on the common perception of the task as involving no training data to speak of, and of grouping the input data into clusters based on some inherent similarity measure (e.g. the distance between instances, considered as vectors in a multi-dimensional vector space), rather than assigning each input instance into one of a set of pre-defined classes. Note also that in some fields, the terminology is different: For example, in community ecology, the term "classification" is used to refer to what is commonly known as "clustering".
The piece of input data for which an output value is generated is formally termed an instance. The instance is formally described by a vector of features, which together constitute a description of all known characteristics of the instance. (These feature vectors can be seen as defining points in an appropriate multidimensional space, and methods for manipulating vectors in vector spaces can be correspondingly applied to them, such as computing the dot product or the angle between two vectors.) Typically, features are either categorical (also known as nominal, i.e., consisting of one of a set of unordered items, such as a gender of "male" or "female", or a blood type of "A", "B", "AB" or "O"), ordinal (consisting of one of a set of ordered items, e.g., "large", "medium" or "small"), integer-valued (e.g., a count of the number of occurrences of a particular word in an email) or real-valued (e.g., a measurement of blood pressure). Often, categorical and ordinal data are grouped together; likewise for integer-valued and real-valued data. Furthermore, many algorithms work only in terms of categorical data and require that real-valued or integer-valued data be discretized into groups (e.g., less than 5, between 5 and 10, or greater than 10).
Many common pattern recognition algorithms are probabilistic in nature, in that they use statistical inference to find the best label for a given instance. Unlike other algorithms, which simply output a "best" label, often probabilistic algorithms also output a probability of the instance being described by the given label. In addition, many probabilistic algorithms output a list of the N-best labels with associated probabilities, for some value of N, instead of simply a single best label. When the number of possible labels is fairly small (e.g., in the case of classification), N may be set so that the probability of all possible labels is output. Probabilistic algorithms have many advantages over non-probabilistic algorithms:
Feature selection algorithms, attempt to directly prune out redundant or irrelevant features. A general introduction to feature selection which summarizes approaches and challenges, has been given.[1] The complexity of feature-selection is, because of its non-monotonous character, an optimization problem where given a total of features the powerset consisting of all subsets of features need to be explored. The Branch-and-Bound algorithm [2] does reduce this complexity but is intractable for medium to large values of the number of available features . For a large-scale comparison of feature-selection algorithms see .[3]
Techniques to transform the raw feature vectors (feature extraction) are sometimes used prior to application of the pattern-matching algorithm. For example, feature extraction algorithms attempt to reduce a large-dimensionality feature vector into a smaller-dimensionality vector that is easier to work with and encodes less redundancy, using mathematical techniques such as principal components analysis (PCA). The distinction between feature selection and feature extraction is that the resulting features after feature extraction has taken place are of a different sort than the original features and may not easily be interpretable, while the features left after feature selection are simply a subset of the original features.
Formally, the problem of supervised pattern recognition can be stated as follows: Given an unknown function (the ground truth) that maps input instances to output labels , along with training data assumed to represent accurate examples of the mapping, produce a function that approximates as closely as possible the correct mapping . (For example, if the problem is filtering spam, then is some representation of an email and is either "spam" or "non-spam"). In order for this to be a well-defined problem, "approximates as closely as possible" needs to be defined rigorously. In decision theory, this is defined by specifying a loss function that assigns a specific value to "loss" resulting from producing an incorrect label. The goal then is to minimize the expected loss, with the expectation taken over the probability distribution of . In practice, neither the distribution of nor the ground truth function are known exactly, but can be computed only empirically by collecting a large number of samples of and hand-labeling them using the correct value of (a time-consuming process, which is typically the limiting factor in the amount of data of this sort that can be collected). The particular loss function depends on the type of label being predicted. For example, in the case of classification, the simple zero-one loss function is often sufficient. This corresponds simply to assigning a loss of 1 to any incorrect labeling and implies that the optimal classifier minimizes the error rate on independent test data (i.e. counting up the fraction of instances that the learned function labels wrongly, which is equivalent to maximizing the number of correctly classified instances). The goal of the learning procedure is then to minimize the error rate (maximize the correctness) on a "typical" test set.
For a probabilistic pattern recognizer, the problem is instead to estimate the probability of each possible output label given a particular input instance, i.e., to estimate a function of the form
where the feature vector input is , and the function f is typically parameterized by some parameters .[4] In a discriminative approach to the problem, f is estimated directly. In a generative approach, however, the inverse probability is instead estimated and combined with the prior probability using Bayes' rule, as follows:
When the labels are continuously distributed (e.g., in regression analysis), the denominator involves integration rather than summation:
The value of is typically learned using maximum a posteriori (MAP) estimation. This finds the best value that simultaneously meets two conflicting objects: To perform as well as possible on the training data (smallest error-rate) and to find the simplest possible model. Essentially, this combines maximum likelihood estimation with a regularization procedure that favors simpler models over more complex models. In a Bayesian context, the regularization procedure can be viewed as placing a prior probability on different values of . Mathematically:
where is the value used for in the subsequent evaluation procedure, and , the posterior probability of , is given by
In the Bayesian approach to this problem, instead of choosing a single parameter vector , the probability of a given label for a new instance is computed by integrating over all possible values of , weighted according to the posterior probability:
The first pattern classifier – the linear discriminant presented by Fisher – was developed in the Frequentist tradition. The frequentist approach entails that the model parameters are considered unknown, but objective. The parameters are then computed (estimated) from the collected data. For the linear discriminant, these parameters are precisely the mean vectors and the Covariance matrix. Also the probability of each class is estimated from the collected dataset. Note that the usage of ‘Bayes rule’ in a pattern classifier does not make the classification approach Bayesian.
Bayesian statistics has its origin in Greek philosophy where a distinction was already made between the ‘a priori’ and the ‘a posteriori’ knowledge. Later Kant defined his distinction between what is a priori known – before observation – and the empirical knowledge gained from observations. In a Bayesian pattern classifier, the class probabilities can be chosen by the user, which are then a priori. Moreover, experience quantified as a priori parameter values can be weighted with empirical observations – using e.g., the Beta- (conjugate prior) and Dirichlet-distributions. The Bayesian approach facilitates a seamless intermixing between expert knowledge in the form of subjective probabilities, and objective observations.
Probabilistic pattern classifiers can be used according to a frequentist or a Bayesian approach.
Within medical science, pattern recognition is the basis for computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) systems. CAD describes a procedure that supports the doctor's interpretations and findings.
Other typical applications of pattern recognition techniques are automatic speech recognition, classification of text into several categories (e.g., spam/non-spam email messages), the automatic recognition of handwritten postal codes on postal envelopes, automatic recognition of images of human faces, or handwriting image extraction from medical forms.[5] The last two examples form the subtopic image analysis of pattern recognition that deals with digital images as input to pattern recognition systems.[6][7]
Optical character recognition is a classic example of the application of a pattern classifier, see OCR-example. The method of signing one's name was captured with stylus and overlay starting in 1990.[citation needed] The strokes, speed, relative min, relative max, acceleration and pressure is used to uniquely identify and confirm identity. Banks were first offered this technology, but were content to collect from the FDIC for any bank fraud and did not want to inconvenience customers..[citation needed]
For a discussion of the aforementioned applications of neural networks in image processing, see e.g.[11]
In psychology, pattern recognition, making sense of and identifying the objects we see is closely related to perception, which explains how the sensory inputs we receive are made meaningful. Pattern recognition can be thought of in two different ways: the first being template matching and the second being feature detection. A template is a pattern used to produce items of the same proportions. The template-matching hypothesis suggests that incoming stimuli are compared with templates in the long term memory. If there is a match, the stimulus is identified. Feature detection models, such as the Pandemonium system for classifying letters (Selfridge, 1959), suggest that the stimuli are broken down into their component parts for identification. For example, a capital E has three horizontal lines and one vertical line.[12]
Algorithms for pattern recognition depend on the type of label output, on whether learning is supervised or unsupervised, and on whether the algorithm is statistical or non-statistical in nature. Statistical algorithms can further be categorized as generative or discriminative.
Supervised:
Unsupervised:
Parametric:[13]
Nonparametric:[14]
Unsupervised:
Supervised and unsupervised:
Supervised (?):
Supervised:
Unsupervised:
This article contains an extensive list of statistical classifiers for supervised and unsupervised classification tasks, clustering and general regression prediction. When considering building a classifier e.g., for a software application, a number of different aspects influence the choice of the preferred classifier type to use.
Building or training a classifier is essentially statistical inference. This means that an attempt is made to identify stochastic (often unknown) relations between feature variables and the categories to be predicted. For example, the influence of increased cholesterol on the risk of a heart attack for a patient, within the next year. Which other variables besides the current cholesterol level determine this risk? The two categories to 'predict' by a classifier are 'heart attack likely', or 'heart attack unlikely'.
The theoretically optimal classifier is called the Bayes classifier. It minimizes the loss-function or risk as defined here. When all types of misclassifications are associated with equal losses (outcome A becomes B is as undesired as when outcome B becomes A), the Bayes classifier with the minimal error rate (on a test set) is the optimal one for the classification task. In general, it is unknown what is the optimal classifier type and true parameters . However, bounds on the optimal Bayes error rate have been derived. For, for example, the K-nearest neighbor classifier theoretical results are derived that bound the error rate, in relation to the optimal Bayes error rate.
In essence, building a classifier brings model selection with it. Feature selection – using only a subset of the available feature variables to predict the most likely categorical outcome – by itself entails model selection. Choosing among the extensive set of different classifiers makes model selection even more complex. A theoretical analysis of this search problem has been presented as the no free lunch theorem:[15] No particular classification algorithm is 'the best' for all problems. The pragmatic approach to this open problem is to combine prior knowledge of the classification task (e.g. distributional assumptions) with a search process where different types of classifiers are developed and their performance compared.
The search for the 'best' model that predicts observations and relations between these is a problem that was discovered already in ancient Greece. In medieval times, Occam's razor was formulated:
“plurality should not be posited without necessity”.
In this context, it means that if a simple classifier with only a few parameters (small ) does the job as well as a much more complex classification algorithm, choose the simpler one. Only to add that the performance of a classifier is but one of the criteria to apply when choosing the best classification model. Distributional assumptions, insight provided into the discovered relations between variables, whether the classification algorithm can cope with missing feature variables, whether a change in class prior probability [16] can be incorporated, speed of the training algorithm, memory requirements, parallelization of the classification process, resemblance to the human perceptual system, and other aspects as well. In visual pattern recognition invariance to variations in color, rotation and scale are extra properties that need to be accounted for.
When choosing the most appropriate supervised classifier, the generally accepted heuristic is to:
This article is based on material taken from the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing prior to 1 November 2008 and incorporated under the "relicensing" terms of the GFDL, version 1.3 or later.
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