Enhancing ensemble learning and transfer learning in multimodal data analysis by adaptive dimensionality reduction
This work addresses reliability and uncertainty issues in multimodal data analysis for fields like remote sensing and energy, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing ensemble and transfer learning methods.
The paper tackled the limitations of ensemble and transfer learning in multimodal data analysis by proposing an adaptive dimensionality reduction method, which outperformed state-of-the-art techniques across diverse datasets such as remote sensing and brain-computer interfaces.
Modern data analytics take advantage of ensemble learning and transfer learning approaches to tackle some of the most relevant issues in data analysis, such as lack of labeled data to use to train the analysis models, sparsity of the information, and unbalanced distributions of the records. Nonetheless, when applied to multimodal datasets (i.e., datasets acquired by means of multiple sensing techniques or strategies), the state-of-theart methods for ensemble learning and transfer learning might show some limitations. In fact, in multimodal data analysis, not all observations would show the same level of reliability or information quality, nor an homogeneous distribution of errors and uncertainties. This condition might undermine the classic assumptions ensemble learning and transfer learning methods rely on. In this work, we propose an adaptive approach for dimensionality reduction to overcome this issue. By means of a graph theory-based approach, the most relevant features across variable size subsets of the considered datasets are identified. This information is then used to set-up ensemble learning and transfer learning architectures. We test our approach on multimodal datasets acquired in diverse research fields (remote sensing, brain-computer interfaces, photovoltaic energy). Experimental results show the validity and the robustness of our approach, able to outperform state-of-the-art techniques.