MLLGSep 5, 2025

Spectral Algorithms in Misspecified Regression: Convergence under Covariate Shift

arXiv:2509.05106v12 citationsh-index: 1
Originality Incremental advance
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This work addresses covariate shift and model misspecification in kernel learning, extending classical theory to more practical settings, though it is incremental as it builds on prior spectral algorithm research.

The paper tackles the problem of covariate shift in nonparametric regression using spectral algorithms, establishing minimax-optimal convergence rates for well-specified cases and introducing a truncation technique for unbounded weights to achieve near-optimal rates in misspecified scenarios.

This paper investigates the convergence properties of spectral algorithms -- a class of regularization methods originating from inverse problems -- under covariate shift. In this setting, the marginal distributions of inputs differ between source and target domains, while the conditional distribution of outputs given inputs remains unchanged. To address this distributional mismatch, we incorporate importance weights, defined as the ratio of target to source densities, into the learning framework. This leads to a weighted spectral algorithm within a nonparametric regression setting in a reproducing kernel Hilbert space (RKHS). More importantly, in contrast to prior work that largely focuses on the well-specified setting, we provide a comprehensive theoretical analysis of the more challenging misspecified case, in which the target function does not belong to the RKHS. Under the assumption of uniformly bounded density ratios, we establish minimax-optimal convergence rates when the target function lies within the RKHS. For scenarios involving unbounded importance weights, we introduce a novel truncation technique that attains near-optimal convergence rates under mild regularity conditions, and we further extend these results to the misspecified regime. By addressing the intertwined challenges of covariate shift and model misspecification, this work extends classical kernel learning theory to more practical scenarios, providing a systematic framework for understanding their interaction.

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