Regularization (mathematics)

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The green and blue functions both incur zero loss on the given data points. A learned model can be induced to prefer the green function, which may generalize better to more points drawn from the underlying unknown distribution, by adjusting , the weight of the regularization term.

In mathematics, statistics, and computer science, particularly in machine learning and inverse problems, regularization is the process of adding information in order to solve an ill-posed problem or to prevent overfitting.[1]

Regularization applies to objective functions in ill-posed optimization problems.

Classification[edit]

One use of regularization is in classification. Empirical learning of classifiers (from a finite data set) is always an underdetermined problem, because it attempts to infer a function of any given only examples .

A regularization term (or regularizer) is added to a loss function:

where is an underlying loss function that describes the cost of predicting when the label is , such as the square loss or hinge loss; and is a parameter which controls the importance of the regularization term. is typically chosen to impose a penalty on the complexity of . Concrete notions of complexity used include restrictions for smoothness and bounds on the vector space norm.[2][page needed]

A theoretical justification for regularization is that it attempts to impose Occam's razor on the solution (as depicted in the figure above, where the green function, the simpler one, may be preferred). From a Bayesian point of view, many regularization techniques correspond to imposing certain prior distributions on model parameters.

Regularization can serve multiple purposes, including learning simpler models, inducing models to be sparse and introducing group structure[clarification needed] into the learning problem.

The same idea arose in many fields of science. For example, the least-squares method can be viewed as a simple form of regularization[citation needed]. A simple form of regularization applied to integral equations, generally termed Tikhonov regularization after Andrey Nikolayevich Tikhonov, is essentially a trade-off between fitting the data and reducing a norm of the solution. More recently, non-linear regularization methods, including total variation regularization, have become popular.

Generalization[edit]

Regularization can be motivated as a technique to improve the generalizability of a learned model.

The goal of this learning problem is to find a function that fits or predicts the outcome (label) that minimizes the expected error over all possible inputs and labels. The expected error of a function is:

Typically in learning problems, only a subset of input data and labels are available, measured with some noise. Therefore, the expected error is unmeasurable, and the best surrogate available is the empirical error over the available samples:

Without bounds on the complexity of the function space (formally, the reproducing kernel Hilbert space) available, a model will be learned that incurs zero loss on the surrogate empirical error. If measurements (e.g. of ) were made with noise, this model may suffer from overfitting and display poor expected error. Regularization introduces a penalty for exploring certain regions of the function space used to build the model, which can improve generalization.

Tikhonov regularization[edit]

When learning a linear function , characterized by an unknown vector such that , the -norm loss corresponds to[clarification needed] Tikhonov regularization. This is one of the most common forms of regularization. It is also known as ridge regression. It is expressed as:

In the case of a general function, we take the norm of the function in its reproducing kernel Hilbert space:

As the norm is differentiable, learning problems using Tikhonov regularization can be solved by gradient descent.

Tikhonov-regularized least squares[edit]

The learning problem with the least squares loss function and Tikhonov regularization can be solved analytically. Written in matrix form, the optimal will be the one for which the gradient of the loss function with respect to is 0.

      This is the first-order condition for this optimization problem

By construction of the optimization problem, other values of would give larger values for the loss function. This could be verified by examining the second derivative .

During training, this algorithm takes time. The terms correspond to the matrix inversion and calculating , respectively. Testing takes time.

Early stopping[edit]

Early stopping can be viewed as regularization in time. Intuitively, a training procedure like gradient descent will tend to learn more and more complex functions as the number of iterations increases. By regularizing on time, the complexity of the model can be controlled, improving generalization.

In practice, early stopping is implemented by training on a training set and measuring accuracy on a statistically independent validation set. The model is trained until performance on the validation set no longer improves. The model is then tested on a testing set.

Theoretical motivation in least squares[edit]

Consider the finite approximation of Neumann series for an invertible matrix A where :

This can be used to approximate the analytical solution of unregularized least squares, if γ is introduced to ensure the norm is less than one.

The exact solution to the unregularized least squares learning problem will minimize the empirical error, but may fail to generalize and minimize the expected error. By limiting T, the only free parameter in the algorithm above, the problem is regularized on time which may improve its generalization.

The algorithm above is equivalent to restricting the number of gradient descent iterations for the empirical risk

with the gradient descent update:

The base case is trivial. The inductive case is proved as follows:

Regularizers for sparsity[edit]

Assume that a dictionary with dimension is given such that a function in the function space can be expressed as:

A comparison between the L1 ball and the L2 ball in two dimensions gives an intuition on how L1 regularization achieves sparsity.

Enforcing a sparsity constraint on can lead to simpler and more interpretable models. This is useful in many real-life applications such as computational biology. An example is developing a simple predictive test for a disease in order to minimize the cost of performing medical tests while maximizing predictive power.

A sensible sparsity constraint is the norm , defined as the number of non-zero elements in . Solving a regularized learning problem, however, has been demonstrated to be NP-hard.[3]

The norm can be used to approximate the optimal norm via convex relaxation. It can be shown that the norm induces sparsity. In the case of least squares, this problem is known as LASSO in statistics and basis pursuit in signal processing.

Elastic net regularization

regularization can occasionally produce non-unique solutions. A simple example is provided in the figure when the space of possible solutions lies on a 45 degree line. This can be problematic for certain applications, and is overcome by combining with regularization in elastic net regularization, which takes the following form:

Elastic net regularization tends to have a grouping effect, where correlated input features are assigned equal weights.

Elastic net regularization is commonly used in practice and is implemented in many machine learning libraries.

Proximal methods[edit]

While the norm does not result in an NP-hard problem, the norm is convex but is not strictly diffentiable due to the kink at x = 0. Subgradient methods which rely on the subderivative can be used to solve regularized learning problems. However, faster convergence can be achieved through proximal methods.

For a problem such that is convex, continuous, differentiable, with Lipschitz continuous gradient (such as the least squares loss function), and is convex, continuous, and proper, then the proximal method to solve the problem is as follows. First define the proximal operator

and then iterate

The proximal method iteratively performs gradient descent and then projects the result back into the space permitted by .

When is the regularizer, the proximal operator is equivalent to the soft-thresholding operator,

This allows for efficient computation.

Group sparsity without overlaps[edit]

Groups of features can be regularized by a sparsity constraint, which can be useful for expressing certain prior knowledge into an optimization problem.

In the case of a linear model with non-overlapping known groups, a regularizer can be defined:

where

This can be viewed as inducing a regularizer over the norm over members of each group followed by an norm over groups.

This can be solved by the proximal method, where the proximal operator is a block-wise soft-thresholding function:

Group sparsity with overlaps[edit]

The algorithm described for group sparsity without overlaps can be applied to the case where groups do overlap, in certain situations. This will likely result in some groups with all zero elements, and other groups with some non-zero and some zero elements.

If it is desired to preserve the group structure, a new regularizer can be defined:

For each , is defined as the vector such that the restriction of to the group equals and all other entries of are zero. The regularizer finds the optimal disintegration of into parts. It can be viewed as duplicating all elements that exist in multiple groups. Learning problems with this regularizer can also be solved with the proximal method with a complication. The proximal operator cannot be computed in closed form, but can be effectively solved iteratively, inducing an inner iteration within the proximal method iteration.

Regularizers for semi-supervised learning[edit]

When labels are more expensive to gather than input examples, semi-supervised learning can be useful. Regularizers have been designed to guide learning algorithms to learn models that respect the structure of unsupervised training samples. If a symmetric weight matrix is given, a regularizer can be defined:

If encodes the result of some distance metric for points and , it is desirable that . This regularizer captures this intuition, and is equivalent to:

where is the Laplacian matrix of the graph induced by .

The optimization problem can be solved analytically if the constraint is applied for all supervised samples. The labeled part of the vector is therefore obvious. The unlabeled part of is solved for by:

Note that the pseudo-inverse can be taken because has the same range as .

Regularizers for multitask learning[edit]

In the case of multitask learning, problems are considered simultaneously, each related in some way. The goal is to learn functions, ideally borrowing strength from the relatedness of tasks, that have predictive power. This is equivalent to learning the matrix .

Sparse regularizer on columns[edit]

This regularizer defines an L2 norm on each column and an L1 norm over all columns. It can be solved by proximal methods.

Nuclear norm regularization[edit]

where is the eigenvalues in the singular value decomposition of .

Mean-constrained regularization[edit]

This regularizer constrains the functions learned for each task to be similar to the overall average of the functions across all tasks. This is useful for expressing prior information that each task is expected to share similarities with each other task. An example is predicting blood iron levels measured at different times of the day, where each task represents a different person.

Clustered mean-constrained regularization[edit]

where is a cluster of tasks.

This regularizer is similar to the mean-constrained regularizer, but instead enforces similarity between tasks within the same cluster. This can capture more complex prior information. This technique has been used to predict Netflix recommendations. A cluster would correspond to a group of people who share similar preferences in movies.

Graph-based similarity[edit]

More general than above, similarity between tasks can be defined by a function. The regularizer encourages the model to learn similar functions for similar tasks.

for a given symmetric similarity matrix .

Other uses of regularization in statistics and machine learning[edit]

Bayesian learning methods make use of a prior probability that (usually) gives lower probability to more complex models. Well-known model selection techniques include the Akaike information criterion (AIC), minimum description length (MDL), and the Bayesian information criterion (BIC). Alternative methods of controlling overfitting not involving regularization include cross-validation.

Examples of applications of different methods of regularization to the linear model are:

Model Fit measure Entropy measure[2][4]
AIC/BIC
Ridge regression[5]
Lasso[6]
Basis pursuit denoising
Rudin–Osher–Fatemi model (TV)
Potts model
RLAD[7]
Dantzig Selector[8]
SLOPE[9]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Bühlmann, Peter; Van De Geer, Sara (2011). "Statistics for High-Dimensional Data". Springer Series in Statistics: 9. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-20192-9. ISBN 978-3-642-20191-2. If p > n, the ordinary least squares estimator is not unique and will heavily overfit the data. Thus, a form of complexity regularization will be necessary.
  2. ^ a b Bishop, Christopher M. (2007). Pattern recognition and machine learning (Corr. printing. ed.). New York: Springer. ISBN 978-0387310732.
  3. ^ Natarajan, B. (1995-04-01). "Sparse Approximate Solutions to Linear Systems". SIAM Journal on Computing. 24 (2): 227–234. doi:10.1137/S0097539792240406. ISSN 0097-5397.
  4. ^ Duda, Richard O. (2004). Pattern classification + computer manual : hardcover set (2. ed.). New York [u.a.]: Wiley. ISBN 978-0471703501.
  5. ^ Arthur E. Hoerl; Robert W. Kennard (1970). "Ridge regression: Biased estimation for nonorthogonal problems". Technometrics. 12 (1): 55–67. doi:10.2307/1267351.
  6. ^ Tibshirani, Robert (1996). "Regression Shrinkage and Selection via the Lasso" (PostScript). Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series B. 58 (1): 267–288. MR 1379242. Retrieved 2009-03-19.
  7. ^ Li Wang, Michael D. Gordon & Ji Zhu (2006). "Regularized Least Absolute Deviations Regression and an Efficient Algorithm for Parameter Tuning". Sixth International Conference on Data Mining. pp. 690–700. doi:10.1109/ICDM.2006.134.
  8. ^ Candes, Emmanuel; Tao, Terence (2007). "The Dantzig selector: Statistical estimation when p is much larger than n". Annals of Statistics. 35 (6): 2313–2351. arXiv:math/0506081. doi:10.1214/009053606000001523. MR 2382644.
  9. ^ Małgorzata Bogdan, Ewout van den Berg, Weijie Su & Emmanuel J. Candes (2013). "Statistical estimation and testing via the ordered L1 norm". arXiv:1310.1969 [stat.ME].CS1 maint: Multiple names: authors list (link)

References[edit]

  • A. Neumaier, Solving ill-conditioned and singular linear systems: A tutorial on regularization, SIAM Review 40 (1998), 636–666. Available in pdf from author's website.