The Value of Labeled and Unlabeled Examples when the Model is Imperfect

Part of Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 20 (NIPS 2007)

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Authors

Kaushik Sinha, Mikhail Belkin

Abstract

Semi-supervised learning, i.e. learning from both labeled and unlabeled data has received signi(cid:2)cant attention in the machine learning literature in recent years. Still our understanding of the theoretical foundations of the usefulness of unla- beled data remains somewhat limited. The simplest and the best understood sit- uation is when the data is described by an identi(cid:2)able mixture model, and where each class comes from a pure component. This natural setup and its implications ware analyzed in [11, 5]. One important result was that in certain regimes, labeled data becomes exponentially more valuable than unlabeled data. However, in most realistic situations, one would not expect that the data comes from a parametric mixture distribution with identi(cid:2)able components. There have been recent efforts to analyze the non-parametric situation, for example, (cid:147)cluster(cid:148) and (cid:147)manifold(cid:148) assumptions have been suggested as a basis for analysis. Still, a satisfactory and fairly complete theoretical understanding of the nonparametric problem, similar to that in [11, 5] has not yet been developed. In this paper we investigate an intermediate situation, when the data comes from a probability distribution, which can be modeled, but not perfectly, by an identi(cid:2)able mixture distribution. This seems applicable to many situation, when, for example, a mixture of Gaussians is used to model the data. the contribution of this paper is an analysis of the role of labeled and unlabeled data depending on the amount of imperfection in the model.