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Songcan Chen

Songcan Chen contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

22 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

MiMuon: Mixed Muon Optimizer with Improved Generalization for Large Models

Matrix-structured parameters frequently appear in many artificial intelligence models such as large language models. More recently, an efficient Muon optimizer is designed for matrix parameters of large-scale models, and shows markedly faster convergence than the vector-wise algorithms. Although some works have begun to study convergence properties (i.e., optimization error) of the Muon optimizer, its generalization properties (i.e., generalization error) is still not established. Thus, in this paper, we study generalization error of the Muon optimizer based on algorithmic stability and mathematical induction, and prove that the Muon has a generalization error of $O\big(\frac{1}{Nκ^{T}}\big)$, where $N$ is training sample size, and $T$ denotes iteration number, and $κ>0$ denotes minimum difference between singular values of gradient estimate. To enhance generalization of the Muon, we propose an effective mixed Muon (MiMuon) optimizer by cautiously using orthogonalization of gradient, which is a hybrid of Muon and momentum-based SGD optimizers. Then we prove that our MiMuon optimizer has a lower generalization error of $O\big(\frac{1}{N}\big)$ than $O\big(\frac{1}{Nκ^{T}}\big)$ of Muon optimizer, since $κ$ generally is very small. Meanwhile, we also studied the convergence properties of our MiMuon algorithm, and prove that our MiMuon algorithm has the same convergence rate of $O(\frac{1}{T^{1/4}})$ as the Muon algorithm. Some numerical experimental results on training large models including Qwen3-0.6B and YOLO26m demonstrate efficiency of the MiMuon optimizer.

preprint2026arXiv

Online Continual Learning with Dynamic Label Hierarchies

Online Continual Learning (OCL) aims to learn from endless non\text{-}stationary data streams, yet most existing methods assume a flat label space and overlook the hierarchical organization of real\text{-}world concepts that evolves both horizontally (sibling classes) and vertically (coarse or fine categories). To better reflect this context, we introduce a new problem setting, DHOCL (Online Continual Learning from Dynamic Hierarchies), where taxonomies evolve across granularities and each sample provides supervision at a single hierarchical level. In this setting, we find two fundamental issues: (i) partial supervision under mixed granularities provides only point-wise signals over an evolving path-wise hierarchy, which constrains plasticity and undermines cross-level semantic consistency, and (ii) the dynamically evolving hierarchies induce granularity-dependent interference, destabilizing popular replay and regularization mechanisms and thereby exacerbating catastrophic forgetting. To tackle these issues, we propose HALO (Hierarchical Adaptive Learning with Organized Prototypes), which adaptively combines complementary classification heads, regularized by organized learnable hierarchical prototypes, enabling rapid adaptation, hierarchical consistency, and structured knowledge consolidation as the taxonomy evolves. Extensive experiments on multiple benchmarks demonstrate that HALO consistently outperforms existing methods across hierarchical accuracy, mistake severity, and continual performance.

preprint2022arXiv

A Novel Splitting Criterion Inspired by Geometric Mean Metric Learning for Decision Tree

Decision tree (DT) attracts persistent research attention due to its impressive empirical performance and interpretability in numerous applications. However, the growth of traditional yet widely-used univariate decision trees (UDTs) is quite time-consuming as they need to traverse all the features to find the splitting value with the maximal reduction of the impurity at each internal node. In this paper, we newly design a splitting criterion to speed up the growth. The criterion is induced from Geometric Mean Metric Learning (GMML) and then optimized under its diagonalized metric matrix constraint, consequently, a closed-form rank of feature discriminant abilities can at once be obtained and the top 1 feature at each node used to grow an intent DT (called as dGMML-DT, where d is an abbreviation for diagonalization). We evaluated the performance of the proposed methods and their corresponding ensembles on benchmark datasets. The experiment shows that dGMML-DT achieves comparable or better classification results more efficiently than the UDTs with 10x average speedup. Furthermore, dGMML-DT can straightforwardly be extended to its multivariable counterpart (dGMML-MDT) without needing laborious operations.

preprint2022arXiv

A Similarity-based Framework for Classification Task

Similarity-based method gives rise to a new class of methods for multi-label learning and also achieves promising performance. In this paper, we generalize this method, resulting in a new framework for classification task. Specifically, we unite similarity-based learning and generalized linear models to achieve the best of both worlds. This allows us to capture interdependencies between classes and prevent from impairing performance of noisy classes. Each learned parameter of the model can reveal the contribution of one class to another, providing interpretability to some extent. Experiment results show the effectiveness of the proposed approach on multi-class and multi-label datasets

preprint2022arXiv

Class-Aware Universum Inspired Re-Balance Learning for Long-Tailed Recognition

Data augmentation for minority classes is an effective strategy for long-tailed recognition, thus developing a large number of methods. Although these methods all ensure the balance in sample quantity, the quality of the augmented samples is not always satisfactory for recognition, being prone to such problems as over-fitting, lack of diversity, semantic drift, etc. For these issues, we propose the Class-aware Universum Inspired Re-balance Learning(CaUIRL) for long-tailed recognition, which endows the Universum with class-aware ability to re-balance individual minority classes from both sample quantity and quality. In particular, we theoretically prove that the classifiers learned by CaUIRL are consistent with those learned under the balanced condition from a Bayesian perspective. In addition, we further develop a higher-order mixup approach, which can automatically generate class-aware Universum(CaU) data without resorting to any external data. Unlike the traditional Universum, such generated Universum additionally takes the domain similarity, class separability, and sample diversity into account. Extensive experiments on benchmark datasets demonstrate the surprising advantages of our method, especially the top1 accuracy in minority classes is improved by 1.9% 6% compared to the state-of-the-art method.

preprint2022arXiv

Convex Subspace Clustering by Adaptive Block Diagonal Representation

Subspace clustering is a class of extensively studied clustering methods where the spectral-type approaches are its important subclass. Its key first step is to desire learning a representation coefficient matrix with block diagonal structure. To realize this step, many methods were successively proposed by imposing different structure priors on the coefficient matrix. These impositions can be roughly divided into two categories, i.e., indirect and direct. The former introduces the priors such as sparsity and low rankness to indirectly or implicitly learn the block diagonal structure. However, the desired block diagonalty cannot necessarily be guaranteed for noisy data. While the latter directly or explicitly imposes the block diagonal structure prior such as block diagonal representation (BDR) to ensure so-desired block diagonalty even if the data is noisy but at the expense of losing the convexity that the former's objective possesses. For compensating their respective shortcomings, in this paper, we follow the direct line to propose Adaptive Block Diagonal Representation (ABDR) which explicitly pursues block diagonalty without sacrificing the convexity of the indirect one. Specifically, inspired by Convex BiClustering, ABDR coercively fuses both columns and rows of the coefficient matrix via a specially designed convex regularizer, thus naturally enjoying their merits and adaptively obtaining the number of blocks. Finally, experimental results on synthetic and real benchmarks demonstrate the superiority of ABDR to the state-of-the-arts (SOTAs).

preprint2022arXiv

Dual-Correction Adaptation Network for Noisy Knowledge Transfer

Previous unsupervised domain adaptation (UDA) methods aim to promote target learning via a single-directional knowledge transfer from label-rich source domain to unlabeled target domain, while its reverse adaption from target to source has not jointly been considered yet so far. In fact, in some real teaching practice, a teacher helps students learn while also gets promotion from students to some extent, which inspires us to explore a dual-directional knowledge transfer between domains, and thus propose a Dual-Correction Adaptation Network (DualCAN) in this paper. However, due to the asymmetrical label knowledge across domains, transfer from unlabeled target to labeled source poses a more difficult challenge than the common source-to-target counterpart. First, the target pseudo-labels predicted by source commonly involve noises due to model bias, hence in the reverse adaptation, they may hurt the source performance and bring a negative target-to-source transfer. Secondly, source domain usually contains innate noises, which will inevitably aggravate the target noises, leading to noise amplification across domains. To this end, we further introduce a Noise Identification and Correction (NIC) module to correct and recycle noises in both domains. To our best knowledge, this is the first naive attempt of dual-directional adaptation for noisy UDA, and naturally applicable to noise-free UDA. A theory justification is given to state the rationality of our intuition. Empirical results confirm the effectiveness of DualCAN with remarkable performance gains over state-of-the-arts, particularly for extreme noisy tasks (e.g., ~+ 15% on Pw->Pr and Pr->Rw of Office-Home).

preprint2022arXiv

Expand Globally, Shrink Locally: Discriminant Multi-label Learning with Missing Labels

In multi-label learning, the issue of missing labels brings a major challenge. Many methods attempt to recovery missing labels by exploiting low-rank structure of label matrix. However, these methods just utilize global low-rank label structure, ignore both local low-rank label structures and label discriminant information to some extent, leaving room for further performance improvement. In this paper, we develop a simple yet effective discriminant multi-label learning (DM2L) method for multi-label learning with missing labels. Specifically, we impose the low-rank structures on all the predictions of instances from the same labels (local shrinking of rank), and a maximally separated structure (high-rank structure) on the predictions of instances from different labels (global expanding of rank). In this way, these imposed low-rank structures can help modeling both local and global low-rank label structures, while the imposed high-rank structure can help providing more underlying discriminability. Our subsequent theoretical analysis also supports these intuitions. In addition, we provide a nonlinear extension via using kernel trick to enhance DM2L and establish a concave-convex objective to learn these models. Compared to the other methods, our method involves the fewest assumptions and only one hyper-parameter. Even so, extensive experiments show that our method still outperforms the state-of-the-art methods.

preprint2022arXiv

Jacobian Norm for Unsupervised Source-Free Domain Adaptation

Unsupervised Source (data) Free domain adaptation (USFDA) aims to transfer knowledge from a well-trained source model to a related but unlabeled target domain. In such a scenario, all conventional adaptation methods that require source data fail. To combat this challenge, existing USFDAs turn to transfer knowledge by aligning the target feature to the latent distribution hidden in the source model. However, such information is naturally limited. Thus, the alignment in such a scenario is not only difficult but also insufficient, which degrades the target generalization performance. To relieve this dilemma in current USFDAs, we are motivated to explore a new perspective to boost their performance. For this purpose and gaining necessary insight, we look back upon the origin of the domain adaptation and first theoretically derive a new-brand target generalization error bound based on the model smoothness. Then, following the theoretical insight, a general and model-smoothness-guided Jacobian norm (JN) regularizer is designed and imposed on the target domain to mitigate this dilemma. Extensive experiments are conducted to validate its effectiveness. In its implementation, just with a few lines of codes added to the existing USFDAs, we achieve superior results on various benchmark datasets.

preprint2022arXiv

Learning Downstream Task by Selectively Capturing Complementary Knowledge from Multiple Self-supervisedly Learning Pretexts

Self-supervised learning (SSL), as a newly emerging unsupervised representation learning paradigm, generally follows a two-stage learning pipeline: 1) learning invariant and discriminative representations with auto-annotation pretext(s), then 2) transferring the representations to assist downstream task(s). Such two stages are usually implemented separately, making the learned representation learned agnostic to the downstream tasks. Currently, most works are devoted to exploring the first stage. Whereas, it is less studied on how to learn downstream tasks with limited labeled data using the already learned representations. Especially, it is crucial and challenging to selectively utilize the complementary representations from diverse pretexts for a downstream task. In this paper, we technically propose a novel solution by leveraging the attention mechanism to adaptively squeeze suitable representations for the tasks. Meanwhile, resorting to information theory, we theoretically prove that gathering representation from diverse pretexts is more effective than a single one. Extensive experiments validate that our scheme significantly exceeds current popular pretext-matching based methods in gathering knowledge and relieving negative transfer in downstream tasks.

preprint2022arXiv

Learning Multi-Tasks with Inconsistent Labels by using Auxiliary Big Task

Multi-task learning is to improve the performance of the model by transferring and exploiting common knowledge among tasks. Existing MTL works mainly focus on the scenario where label sets among multiple tasks (MTs) are usually the same, thus they can be utilized for learning across the tasks. While almost rare works explore the scenario where each task only has a small amount of training samples, and their label sets are just partially overlapped or even not. Learning such MTs is more challenging because of less correlation information available among these tasks. For this, we propose a framework to learn these tasks by jointly leveraging both abundant information from a learnt auxiliary big task with sufficiently many classes to cover those of all these tasks and the information shared among those partially-overlapped tasks. In our implementation of using the same neural network architecture of the learnt auxiliary task to learn individual tasks, the key idea is to utilize available label information to adaptively prune the hidden layer neurons of the auxiliary network to construct corresponding network for each task, while accompanying a joint learning across individual tasks. Our experimental results demonstrate its effectiveness in comparison with the state-of-the-art approaches.

preprint2022arXiv

Towards Adaptive Unknown Authentication for Universal Domain Adaptation by Classifier Paradox

Universal domain adaptation (UniDA) is a general unsupervised domain adaptation setting, which addresses both domain and label shifts in adaptation. Its main challenge lies in how to identify target samples in unshared or unknown classes. Previous methods commonly strive to depict sample "confidence" along with a threshold for rejecting unknowns, and align feature distributions of shared classes across domains. However, it is still hard to pre-specify a "confidence" criterion and threshold which are adaptive to various real tasks, and a mis-prediction of unknowns further incurs misalignment of features in shared classes. In this paper, we propose a new UniDA method with adaptive Unknown Authentication by Classifier Paradox (UACP), considering that samples with paradoxical predictions are probably unknowns belonging to none of the source classes. In UACP, a composite classifier is jointly designed with two types of predictors. That is, a multi-class (MC) predictor classifies samples to one of the multiple source classes, while a binary one-vs-all (OVA) predictor further verifies the prediction by MC predictor. Samples with verification failure or paradox are identified as unknowns. Further, instead of feature alignment for shared classes, implicit domain alignment is conducted in output space such that samples across domains share the same decision boundary, though with feature discrepancy. Empirical results validate UACP under both open-set and universal UDA settings.

preprint2021arXiv

Learning Twofold Heterogeneous Multi-Task by Sharing Similar Convolution Kernel Pairs

Heterogeneous multi-task learning (HMTL) is an important topic in multi-task learning (MTL). Most existing HMTL methods usually solve either scenario where all tasks reside in the same input (feature) space yet unnecessarily the consistent output (label) space or scenario where their input (feature) spaces are heterogeneous while the output (label) space is consistent. However, to the best of our knowledge, there is limited study on twofold heterogeneous MTL (THMTL) scenario where the input and the output spaces are both inconsistent or heterogeneous. In order to handle this complicated scenario, in this paper, we design a simple and effective multi-task adaptive learning (MTAL) network to learn multiple tasks in such THMTL setting. Specifically, we explore and utilize the inherent relationship between tasks for knowledge sharing from similar convolution kernels in individual layers of the MTAL network. Then in order to realize the sharing, we weightedly aggregate any pair of convolutional kernels with their similarity greater than some threshold $ρ$, consequently, our model effectively performs cross-task learning while suppresses the intra-redundancy of the entire network. Finally, we conduct end-to-end training. Our experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of our method in comparison with the state-of-the-art counterparts.

preprint2020arXiv

A Centroid Auto-Fused Hierarchical Fuzzy c-Means Clustering

Like k-means and Gaussian Mixture Model (GMM), fuzzy c-means (FCM) with soft partition has also become a popular clustering algorithm and still is extensively studied. However, these algorithms and their variants still suffer from some difficulties such as determination of the optimal number of clusters which is a key factor for clustering quality. A common approach for overcoming this difficulty is to use the trial-and-validation strategy, i.e., traversing every integer from large number like $\sqrt{n}$ to 2 until finding the optimal number corresponding to the peak value of some cluster validity index. But it is scarcely possible to naturally construct an adaptively agglomerative hierarchical cluster structure as using the trial-and-validation strategy. Even possible, existing different validity indices also lead to different number of clusters. To effectively mitigate the problems while motivated by convex clustering, in this paper we present a Centroid Auto-Fused Hierarchical Fuzzy c-means method (CAF-HFCM) whose optimization procedure can automatically agglomerate to form a cluster hierarchy, more importantly, yielding an optimal number of clusters without resorting to any validity index. Although a recently-proposed robust-learning fuzzy c-means (RL-FCM) can also automatically obtain the best number of clusters without the help of any validity index, so-involved 3 hyper-parameters need to adjust expensively, conversely, our CAF-HFCM involves just 1 hyper-parameter which makes the corresponding adjustment is relatively easier and more operational. Further, as an additional benefit from our optimization objective, the CAF-HFCM effectively reduces the sensitivity to the initialization of clustering performance. Moreover, our proposed CAF-HFCM method is able to be straightforwardly extended to various variants of FCM.

preprint2020arXiv

A Multi-view Perspective of Self-supervised Learning

As a newly emerging unsupervised learning paradigm, self-supervised learning (SSL) recently gained widespread attention, which usually introduces a pretext task without manual annotation of data. With its help, SSL effectively learns the feature representation beneficial for downstream tasks. Thus the pretext task plays a key role. However, the study of its design, especially its essence currently is still open. In this paper, we borrow a multi-view perspective to decouple a class of popular pretext tasks into a combination of view data augmentation (VDA) and view label classification (VLC), where we attempt to explore the essence of such pretext task while providing some insights into its design. Specifically, a simple multi-view learning framework is specially designed (SSL-MV), which assists the feature learning of downstream tasks (original view) through the same tasks on the augmented views. SSL-MV focuses on VDA while abandons VLC, empirically uncovering that it is VDA rather than generally considered VLC that dominates the performance of such SSL. Additionally, thanks to replacing VLC with VDA tasks, SSL-MV also enables an integrated inference combining the predictions from the augmented views, further improving the performance. Experiments on several benchmark datasets demonstrate its advantages.

preprint2020arXiv

Accelerated Stochastic Gradient-free and Projection-free Methods

In the paper, we propose a class of accelerated stochastic gradient-free and projection-free (a.k.a., zeroth-order Frank-Wolfe) methods to solve the constrained stochastic and finite-sum nonconvex optimization. Specifically, we propose an accelerated stochastic zeroth-order Frank-Wolfe (Acc-SZOFW) method based on the variance reduced technique of SPIDER/SpiderBoost and a novel momentum accelerated technique. Moreover, under some mild conditions, we prove that the Acc-SZOFW has the function query complexity of $O(d\sqrt{n}ε^{-2})$ for finding an $ε$-stationary point in the finite-sum problem, which improves the exiting best result by a factor of $O(\sqrt{n}ε^{-2})$, and has the function query complexity of $O(dε^{-3})$ in the stochastic problem, which improves the exiting best result by a factor of $O(ε^{-1})$. To relax the large batches required in the Acc-SZOFW, we further propose a novel accelerated stochastic zeroth-order Frank-Wolfe (Acc-SZOFW*) based on a new variance reduced technique of STORM, which still reaches the function query complexity of $O(dε^{-3})$ in the stochastic problem without relying on any large batches. In particular, we present an accelerated framework of the Frank-Wolfe methods based on the proposed momentum accelerated technique. The extensive experimental results on black-box adversarial attack and robust black-box classification demonstrate the efficiency of our algorithms.

preprint2020arXiv

Collective decision for open set recognition

In open set recognition (OSR), almost all existing methods are designed specially for recognizing individual instances, even these instances are collectively coming in batch. Recognizers in decision either reject or categorize them to some known class using empirically-set threshold. Thus the decision threshold plays a key role. However, the selection for it usually depends on the knowledge of known classes, inevitably incurring risks due to lacking available information from unknown classes. On the other hand, a more realistic OSR system should NOT just rest on a reject decision but should go further, especially for discovering the hidden unknown classes among the reject instances, whereas existing OSR methods do not pay special attention. In this paper, we introduce a novel collective/batch decision strategy with an aim to extend existing OSR for new class discovery while considering correlations among the testing instances. Specifically, a collective decision-based OSR framework (CD-OSR) is proposed by slightly modifying the Hierarchical Dirichlet process (HDP). Thanks to HDP, our CD-OSR does not need to define the decision threshold and can implement the open set recognition and new class discovery simultaneously. Finally, extensive experiments on benchmark datasets indicate the validity of CD-OSR.

preprint2020arXiv

Faster Stochastic Alternating Direction Method of Multipliers for Nonconvex Optimization

In this paper, we propose a faster stochastic alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) for nonconvex optimization by using a new stochastic path-integrated differential estimator (SPIDER), called as SPIDER-ADMM. Moreover, we prove that the SPIDER-ADMM achieves a record-breaking incremental first-order oracle (IFO) complexity of $\mathcal{O}(n+n^{1/2}ε^{-1})$ for finding an $ε$-approximate stationary point, which improves the deterministic ADMM by a factor $\mathcal{O}(n^{1/2})$, where $n$ denotes the sample size. As one of major contribution of this paper, we provide a new theoretical analysis framework for nonconvex stochastic ADMM methods with providing the optimal IFO complexity. Based on this new analysis framework, we study the unsolved optimal IFO complexity of the existing non-convex SVRG-ADMM and SAGA-ADMM methods, and prove they have the optimal IFO complexity of $\mathcal{O}(n+n^{2/3}ε^{-1})$. Thus, the SPIDER-ADMM improves the existing stochastic ADMM methods by a factor of $\mathcal{O}(n^{1/6})$. Moreover, we extend SPIDER-ADMM to the online setting, and propose a faster online SPIDER-ADMM. Our theoretical analysis shows that the online SPIDER-ADMM has the IFO complexity of $\mathcal{O}(ε^{-\frac{3}{2}})$, which improves the existing best results by a factor of $\mathcal{O}(ε^{-\frac{1}{2}})$. Finally, the experimental results on benchmark datasets validate that the proposed algorithms have faster convergence rate than the existing ADMM algorithms for nonconvex optimization.

preprint2020arXiv

Recent Advances in Open Set Recognition: A Survey

In real-world recognition/classification tasks, limited by various objective factors, it is usually difficult to collect training samples to exhaust all classes when training a recognizer or classifier. A more realistic scenario is open set recognition (OSR), where incomplete knowledge of the world exists at training time, and unknown classes can be submitted to an algorithm during testing, requiring the classifiers to not only accurately classify the seen classes, but also effectively deal with the unseen ones. This paper provides a comprehensive survey of existing open set recognition techniques covering various aspects ranging from related definitions, representations of models, datasets, evaluation criteria, and algorithm comparisons. Furthermore, we briefly analyze the relationships between OSR and its related tasks including zero-shot, one-shot (few-shot) recognition/learning techniques, classification with reject option, and so forth. Additionally, we also overview the open world recognition which can be seen as a natural extension of OSR. Importantly, we highlight the limitations of existing approaches and point out some promising subsequent research directions in this field.

preprint2013arXiv

$l_{2,p}$ Matrix Norm and Its Application in Feature Selection

Recently, $l_{2,1}$ matrix norm has been widely applied to many areas such as computer vision, pattern recognition, biological study and etc. As an extension of $l_1$ vector norm, the mixed $l_{2,1}$ matrix norm is often used to find jointly sparse solutions. Moreover, an efficient iterative algorithm has been designed to solve $l_{2,1}$-norm involved minimizations. Actually, computational studies have showed that $l_p$-regularization ($0<p<1$) is sparser than $l_1$-regularization, but the extension to matrix norm has been seldom considered. This paper presents a definition of mixed $l_{2,p}$ $(p\in (0, 1])$ matrix pseudo norm which is thought as both generalizations of $l_p$ vector norm to matrix and $l_{2,1}$-norm to nonconvex cases $(0<p<1)$. Fortunately, an efficient unified algorithm is proposed to solve the induced $l_{2,p}$-norm $(p\in (0, 1])$ optimization problems. The convergence can also be uniformly demonstrated for all $p\in (0, 1]$. Typical $p\in (0,1]$ are applied to select features in computational biology and the experimental results show that some choices of $0<p<1$ do improve the sparse pattern of using $p=1$.

preprint2012arXiv

Margin Distribution Controlled Boosting

Schapire&#39;s margin theory provides a theoretical explanation to the success of boosting-type methods and manifests that a good margin distribution (MD) of training samples is essential for generalization. However the statement that a MD is good is vague, consequently, many recently developed algorithms try to generate a MD in their goodness senses for boosting generalization. Unlike their indirect control over MD, in this paper, we propose an alternative boosting algorithm termed Margin distribution Controlled Boosting (MCBoost) which directly controls the MD by introducing and optimizing a key adjustable margin parameter. MCBoost&#39;s optimization implementation adopts the column generation technique to ensure fast convergence and small number of weak classifiers involved in the final MCBooster. We empirically demonstrate: 1) AdaBoost is actually also a MD controlled algorithm and its iteration number acts as a parameter controlling the distribution and 2) the generalization performance of MCBoost evaluated on UCI benchmark datasets is validated better than those of AdaBoost, L2Boost, LPBoost, AdaBoost-CG and MDBoost.

preprint2012arXiv

Metric Learning across Heterogeneous Domains by Respectively Aligning Both Priors and Posteriors

In this paper, we attempts to learn a single metric across two heterogeneous domains where source domain is fully labeled and has many samples while target domain has only a few labeled samples but abundant unlabeled samples. To the best of our knowledge, this task is seldom touched. The proposed learning model has a simple underlying motivation: all the samples in both the source and the target domains are mapped into a common space, where both their priors P(sample)s and their posteriors P(label|sample)s are forced to be respectively aligned as much as possible. We show that the two mappings, from both the source domain and the target domain to the common space, can be reparameterized into a single positive semi-definite(PSD) matrix. Then we develop an efficient Bregman Projection algorithm to optimize the PDS matrix over which a LogDet function is used to regularize. Furthermore, we also show that this model can be easily kernelized and verify its effectiveness in crosslanguage retrieval task and cross-domain object recognition task.