scholarly journals Extending Statistical Boosting

2014 ◽  
Vol 53 (06) ◽  
pp. 428-435 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Binder ◽  
O. Gefeller ◽  
M. Schmid ◽  
A. Mayr

SummaryBackground: Boosting algorithms to simultaneously estimate and select predictor effects in statistical models have gained substantial interest during the last decade.Objectives: This review highlights recent methodological developments regarding boosting algorithms for statistical modelling especially focusing on topics relevant for biomedical research.Methods: We suggest a unified framework for gradient boosting and likelihood-based boosting (statistical boosting) which have been addressed separately in the literature up to now.Results: The methodological developments on statistical boosting during the last ten years can be grouped into three different lines of research: i) efforts to ensure variable selection leading to sparser models, ii) developments regarding different types of predictor effects and how to choose them, iii) approaches to extend the statistical boosting framework to new regression settings.Conclusions: Statistical boosting algorithms have been adapted to carry out unbiased variable selection and automated model choice during the fitting process and can nowadays be applied in almost any regression setting in combination with a large amount of different types of predictor effects.

2014 ◽  
Vol 53 (06) ◽  
pp. 419-427 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Binder ◽  
O. Gefeller ◽  
M. Schmid ◽  
A. Mayr

SummaryBackground: The concept of boosting emerged from the field of machine learning. The basic idea is to boost the accuracy of a weak classifying tool by combining various instances into a more accurate prediction. This general concept was later adapted to the field of statistical modelling. Nowadays, boosting algorithms are often applied to estimate and select predictor effects in statistical regression models.Objectives: This review article attempts to highlight the evolution of boosting algorithms from machine learning to statistical modelling.Methods: We describe the AdaBoost algorithm for classification as well as the two most prominent statistical boosting approaches, gradient boosting and likelihood-based boosting for statistical modelling. We highlight the methodological background and present the most common software implementations.Results: Although gradient boosting and likelihood-based boosting are typically treated separately in the literature, they share the same methodological roots and follow the same fundamental concepts. Compared to the initial machine learning algorithms, which must be seen as black-box prediction schemes, they result in statistical models with a straight-forward interpretation.Conclusions: Statistical boosting algorithms have gained substantial interest during the last decade and offer a variety of options to address important research questions in modern biomedicine.


2014 ◽  
Vol 53 (06) ◽  
pp. 417-418 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Hothorn

SummaryThis editorial is part of a For-Discussion- Section of Methods of Information in Medicine about the papers “The Evolution of Boosting Algorithms – From Machine Learning to Statistical Modelling” [1] and “Ex-tending Statistical Boosting – An Overview of Recent Methodological Developments” [2], written by Andreas Mayr and co authors. It preludes two discussed reviews on developments and applications of boosting in biomedical research. The two review papers, written by Andreas Mayr, Harald Binder, Olaf Gefeller, and Matthias Schmid, give an overview on recently published methods that utilise gradient or likelihood-based boosting for fitting models in the life sciences. The reviews are followed by invited comments [3] by experts in both boosting theory and applications.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 460-482 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gunther Schauberger ◽  
Andreas Groll

Many approaches that analyse and predict results of international matches in football are based on statistical models incorporating several potentially influential covariates with respect to a national team's success, such as the bookmakers’ ratings or the FIFA ranking. Based on all matches from the four previous FIFA World Cups 2002–2014, we compare the most common regression models that are based on the teams’ covariate information with regard to their predictive performances with an alternative modelling class, the so-called random forests. Random forests can be seen as a mixture between machine learning and statistical modelling and are known for their high predictive power. Here, we consider two different types of random forests depending on the choice of response. One type of random forests predicts the precise numbers of goals, while the other type considers the three match outcomes—win, draw and loss—using special algorithms for ordinal responses. To account for the specific data structure of football matches, in particular at FIFA World Cups, the random forest methods are slightly altered compared to their standard versions and adapted to the specific needs of the application to FIFA World Cup data.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Mayr ◽  
Benjamin Hofner ◽  
Elisabeth Waldmann ◽  
Tobias Hepp ◽  
Sebastian Meyer ◽  
...  

Statistical boosting algorithms have triggered a lot of research during the last decade. They combine a powerful machine learning approach with classical statistical modelling, offering various practical advantages like automated variable selection and implicit regularization of effect estimates. They are extremely flexible, as the underlying base-learners (regression functions defining the type of effect for the explanatory variables) can be combined with any kind of loss function (target function to be optimized, defining the type of regression setting). In this review article, we highlight the most recent methodological developments on statistical boosting regarding variable selection, functional regression, and advanced time-to-event modelling. Additionally, we provide a short overview on relevant applications of statistical boosting in biomedicine.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 365-384 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Mayr ◽  
Benjamin Hofner

Boosting algorithms were originally developed for machine learning but were later adapted to estimate statistical models—offering various practical advantages such as automated variable selection and implicit regularization of effect estimates. The interpretation of the resulting models, however, remains the same as if they had been fitted by classical methods. Boosting, hence, allows to use an advanced machine learning scheme to estimate various types of statistical models. This tutorial aims to highlight how boosting can be used for semi-parametric modelling, what practical implications follow from the design of the algorithm and what kind of drawbacks data analysts have to expect. We illustrate the application of boosting in the analysis of a stunting score from children in India and a high-dimensional dataset of tumour DNA to develop a biomarker for the occurrence of metastases in breast cancer patients.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 973
Author(s):  
Gigel Paraschiv ◽  
Georgiana Moiceanu ◽  
Gheorghe Voicu ◽  
Mihai Chitoiu ◽  
Petru Cardei ◽  
...  

Our paper presents the hammer mill working process optimization problem destined for milling energetic biomass (MiscanthusGiganteus and Salix Viminalis). For the study, functional and constructive parameters of the hammer mill were taken into consideration in order to reduce the specific energy consumption. The energy consumption dependency on the mill rotor spinning frequency and on the sieve orifices in use, as well as on the material feeding flow, in correlation with the vegetal biomass milling degree was the focus of the analysis. For obtaining this the hammer mill was successively equipped with 4 different types of hammers that grind the energetic biomass, which had a certain humidity content and an initial degree of reduction ratio of the material. In order to start the optimization process of hammer mill working process, 12 parameters were defined. The objective functions which minimize hammer mill energy consumption and maximize the milled material percentage with a certain specific granulation were established. The results obtained can serve as the basis for choosing the optimal working, constructive, and functional parameters of hammer mills in this field, and for a better design of future hammer mills.


Author(s):  
Wei Huang ◽  
Xiaoshu Zhou ◽  
Mingchao Dong ◽  
Huaiyu Xu

AbstractRobust and high-performance visual multi-object tracking is a big challenge in computer vision, especially in a drone scenario. In this paper, an online Multi-Object Tracking (MOT) approach in the UAV system is proposed to handle small target detections and class imbalance challenges, which integrates the merits of deep high-resolution representation network and data association method in a unified framework. Specifically, while applying tracking-by-detection architecture to our tracking framework, a Hierarchical Deep High-resolution network (HDHNet) is proposed, which encourages the model to handle different types and scales of targets, and extract more effective and comprehensive features during online learning. After that, the extracted features are fed into different prediction networks for interesting targets recognition. Besides, an adjustable fusion loss function is proposed by combining focal loss and GIoU loss to solve the problems of class imbalance and hard samples. During the tracking process, these detection results are applied to an improved DeepSORT MOT algorithm in each frame, which is available to make full use of the target appearance features to match one by one on a practical basis. The experimental results on the VisDrone2019 MOT benchmark show that the proposed UAV MOT system achieves the highest accuracy and the best robustness compared with state-of-the-art methods.


2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 6203-6230 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon Ruske ◽  
David O. Topping ◽  
Virginia E. Foot ◽  
Andrew P. Morse ◽  
Martin W. Gallagher

Abstract. Primary biological aerosol including bacteria, fungal spores and pollen have important implications for public health and the environment. Such particles may have different concentrations of chemical fluorophores and will respond differently in the presence of ultraviolet light, potentially allowing for different types of biological aerosol to be discriminated. Development of ultraviolet light induced fluorescence (UV-LIF) instruments such as the Wideband Integrated Bioaerosol Sensor (WIBS) has allowed for size, morphology and fluorescence measurements to be collected in real-time. However, it is unclear without studying instrument responses in the laboratory, the extent to which different types of particles can be discriminated. Collection of laboratory data is vital to validate any approach used to analyse data and ensure that the data available is utilized as effectively as possible. In this paper a variety of methodologies are tested on a range of particles collected in the laboratory. Hierarchical agglomerative clustering (HAC) has been previously applied to UV-LIF data in a number of studies and is tested alongside other algorithms that could be used to solve the classification problem: Density Based Spectral Clustering and Noise (DBSCAN), k-means and gradient boosting. Whilst HAC was able to effectively discriminate between reference narrow-size distribution PSL particles, yielding a classification error of only 1.8 %, similar results were not obtained when testing on laboratory generated aerosol where the classification error was found to be between 11.5 % and 24.2 %. Furthermore, there is a large uncertainty in this approach in terms of the data preparation and the cluster index used, and we were unable to attain consistent results across the different sets of laboratory generated aerosol tested. The lowest classification errors were obtained using gradient boosting, where the misclassification rate was between 4.38 % and 5.42 %. The largest contribution to the error, in the case of the higher misclassification rate, was the pollen samples where 28.5 % of the samples were incorrectly classified as fungal spores. The technique was robust to changes in data preparation provided a fluorescent threshold was applied to the data. In the event that laboratory training data are unavailable, DBSCAN was found to be a potential alternative to HAC. In the case of one of the data sets where 22.9 % of the data were left unclassified we were able to produce three distinct clusters obtaining a classification error of only 1.42 % on the classified data. These results could not be replicated for the other data set where 26.8 % of the data were not classified and a classification error of 13.8 % was obtained. This method, like HAC, also appeared to be heavily dependent on data preparation, requiring a different selection of parameters depending on the preparation used. Further analysis will also be required to confirm our selection of the parameters when using this method on ambient data. There is a clear need for the collection of additional laboratory generated aerosol to improve interpretation of current databases and to aid in the analysis of data collected from an ambient environment. New instruments with a greater resolution are likely to improve on current discrimination between pollen, bacteria and fungal spores and even between different species, however the need for extensive laboratory data sets will grow as a result.


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