CVLGMLApr 28, 2015

Becoming the Expert - Interactive Multi-Class Machine Teaching

arXiv:1504.07575v175 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of personalized and efficient human learning in visual classification tasks, representing an incremental improvement in interactive teaching methods.

The paper tackles the problem of efficiently teaching visual concepts to humans by proposing an interactive machine teaching algorithm that adaptively selects teaching images based on the student's evolving knowledge, resulting in better 'experts' as demonstrated with real human participants across varied datasets.

Compared to machines, humans are extremely good at classifying images into categories, especially when they possess prior knowledge of the categories at hand. If this prior information is not available, supervision in the form of teaching images is required. To learn categories more quickly, people should see important and representative images first, followed by less important images later - or not at all. However, image-importance is individual-specific, i.e. a teaching image is important to a student if it changes their overall ability to discriminate between classes. Further, students keep learning, so while image-importance depends on their current knowledge, it also varies with time. In this work we propose an Interactive Machine Teaching algorithm that enables a computer to teach challenging visual concepts to a human. Our adaptive algorithm chooses, online, which labeled images from a teaching set should be shown to the student as they learn. We show that a teaching strategy that probabilistically models the student's ability and progress, based on their correct and incorrect answers, produces better 'experts'. We present results using real human participants across several varied and challenging real-world datasets.

Foundations

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