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Optimizing Estimated Loss Reduction for Active Sampling in Rank Learning Presented by Pinar Donmez joint work with Jaime G. Carbonell Language Technologies.

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Presentation on theme: "Optimizing Estimated Loss Reduction for Active Sampling in Rank Learning Presented by Pinar Donmez joint work with Jaime G. Carbonell Language Technologies."— Presentation transcript:

1 Optimizing Estimated Loss Reduction for Active Sampling in Rank Learning Presented by Pinar Donmez joint work with Jaime G. Carbonell Language Technologies Institute Carnegie Mellon University MSR Redmond, June 27 2008

2 Road Map The Challenge: Active Rank Learning Related Work DiffLoss: New Method for Active Learning for RankSVM and RankBoost Results: DiffLoss vs. Margin-Based and Random Sampling Conclusion

3 Active Rank Learning: Why do we care? Challenge: Labeling for rank learning requires eliciting relative ordering over a set of alternatives costly time-consuming extensive human effort Numerous applications document retrieval collaborative filtering product rating...

4 Active Rank Learning: How to address? an optimal active learner samples those with the lowest estimated expected error on the test set (Roy & McCallum, 2001) impractical for large-scale ranking problems even with efficient re-training Our solution: estimate how likely adding a new instance will result in the lowest expected error on the test data without any re-training based on the likelihood of the change of the current hypothesis the greater this change, the greater the chance to learn the true hypothesis faster

5 Related Work Margin-based Sampling (Brinker, 2004; Yu, 2005) margin := minimum difference of scores between two instances in the ranked order selects the examples with minimum margin pro: simple to implement, generalizable to real-valued ranking function con: similar instances with the same rank label may have minimum margin Divergence-based Sampling (Amini et al, 2006) similar to query-by-committee sampling selects instances at which two ranking functions maximally disagree major drawback: effective only when provided with a sufficiently large initial labeled set

6 Notation Set of feature vectors Set of rank labels denotes is ranked higher than For a perfect ranking function Data

7 Active Sampling for RankSVM I Consider a candidate Assume is added to training set with Total loss on pairs that include is: n is the # of training instances with a different label than Objective function to be minimized becomes:

8 Active Sampling for RankSVM II Assume the current ranking function is There are two possible cases: Assume Derivative w.r.t at a single point or

9 Active Sampling for RankSVM III Substitute in the previous equation to estimate Magnitude of the total derivative estimates the ability of to change the current ranker if added into training Finally,

10 Active Sampling for RankBoost I Again, estimate how the current ranker would change if was in the training set Estimate this change by the difference in ranking loss before and after is added Ranking loss w.r.t is (Freund et al., 2003):

11 Active Sampling for RankBoost II Difference in the ranking loss between the current and the enlarged set: indicates how much the current ranker needs to change to compensate for the loss introduced by the new instance Finally, the instance with the highest loss differential is sampled:

12 Data & Settings TREC 2003 and TREC 2004 topic distillations datasets in LETOR Initial training set has 16 docs/query (1 relevant & 15 non-relevant) Select 5 docs/query at each iteration

13 Performance Measures MAP (Mean Average Precision) MAP is the average of AP values for all queries NDCG (Normalized Discounted Cumulative Gain) The impact of each relevant document is discounted as a function of rank position

14 Results on TREC03 * Horizontal line indicates the performance if all the data is used as the training set.

15 Results on TREC04

16 Results at a Glance Our method (DiffLoss) is significantly superior over the entire operating range (p<0.0001). DiffLoss achieves 30% relative improvement over the margin-based sampling on TREC03. DiffLoss using RankSVM reaches the optimal performance after ~10 rounds. DiffLoss using RankBoost reaches 90-95% of the optimal performance after ~10 rounds.

17 Conclusion Two new active sampling methods for RankSVM and RankBoost Instances with the largest expected loss differential are sampled Our method has a significantly faster learning rate compared to baselines In the future, we plan to focus on sampling by directly optimizing performance metrics automatically determining when to stop sampling

18 THE END!

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