Optimization of distributions differences for classification
This addresses classification accuracy and generalization for machine learning practitioners, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing optimization and transformation concepts.
The paper tackles classification by introducing ODD, a method that transforms feature space to minimize intra-class distances and maximize inter-class distances, achieving better performance than six state-of-the-art methods across 12 datasets with improved generalization and robustness to imbalanced data.
In this paper we introduce a new classification algorithm called Optimization of Distributions Differences (ODD). The algorithm aims to find a transformation from the feature space to a new space where the instances in the same class are as close as possible to one another while the gravity centers of these classes are as far as possible from one another. This aim is formulated as a multiobjective optimization problem that is solved by a hybrid of an evolutionary strategy and the Quasi-Newton method. The choice of the transformation function is flexible and could be any continuous space function. We experiment with a linear and a non-linear transformation in this paper. We show that the algorithm can outperform 6 other state-of-the-art classification methods, namely naive Bayes, support vector machines, linear discriminant analysis, multi-layer perceptrons, decision trees, and k-nearest neighbors, in 12 standard classification datasets. Our results show that the method is less sensitive to the imbalanced number of instances comparing to these methods. We also show that ODD maintains its performance better than other classification methods in these datasets, hence, offers a better generalization ability.