Tunable GMM Kernels

9 Jan 2017  ·  Ping Li ·

The recently proposed "generalized min-max" (GMM) kernel can be efficiently linearized, with direct applications in large-scale statistical learning and fast near neighbor search. The linearized GMM kernel was extensively compared in with linearized radial basis function (RBF) kernel. On a large number of classification tasks, the tuning-free GMM kernel performs (surprisingly) well compared to the best-tuned RBF kernel. Nevertheless, one would naturally expect that the GMM kernel ought to be further improved if we introduce tuning parameters. In this paper, we study three simple constructions of tunable GMM kernels: (i) the exponentiated-GMM (or eGMM) kernel, (ii) the powered-GMM (or pGMM) kernel, and (iii) the exponentiated-powered-GMM (epGMM) kernel. The pGMM kernel can still be efficiently linearized by modifying the original hashing procedure for the GMM kernel. On about 60 publicly available classification datasets, we verify that the proposed tunable GMM kernels typically improve over the original GMM kernel. On some datasets, the improvements can be astonishingly significant. For example, on 11 popular datasets which were used for testing deep learning algorithms and tree methods, our experiments show that the proposed tunable GMM kernels are strong competitors to trees and deep nets. The previous studies developed tree methods including "abc-robust-logitboost" and demonstrated the excellent performance on those 11 datasets (and other datasets), by establishing the second-order tree-split formula and new derivatives for multi-class logistic loss. Compared to tree methods like "abc-robust-logitboost" (which are slow and need substantial model sizes), the tunable GMM kernels produce largely comparable results.

PDF Abstract
No code implementations yet. Submit your code now

Datasets


  Add Datasets introduced or used in this paper

Results from the Paper


  Submit results from this paper to get state-of-the-art GitHub badges and help the community compare results to other papers.

Methods


No methods listed for this paper. Add relevant methods here