Orthogonal-Least-Squares Forward Selection for Parsimonious Modelling from Data

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DOI: 10.4236/eng.2009.12008    8,982 Downloads   14,109 Views  Citations
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ABSTRACT

The objective of modelling from data is not that the model simply fits the training data well. Rather, the goodness of a model is characterized by its generalization capability, interpretability and ease for knowledge extraction. All these desired properties depend crucially on the ability to construct appropriate parsimonious models by the modelling process, and a basic principle in practical nonlinear data modelling is the parsimonious principle of ensuring the smallest possible model that explains the training data. There exists a vast amount of works in the area of sparse modelling, and a widely adopted approach is based on the linear-in-the-parameters data modelling that include the radial basis function network, the neurofuzzy network and all the sparse kernel modelling techniques. A well tested strategy for parsimonious modelling from data is the orthogonal least squares (OLS) algorithm for forward selection modelling, which is capable of constructing sparse models that generalise well. This contribution continues this theme and provides a unified framework for sparse modelling from data that includes regression and classification, which belong to supervised learning, and probability density function estimation, which is an unsupervised learning problem. The OLS forward selection method based on the leave-one-out test criteria is presented within this unified data-modelling framework. Examples from regression, classification and density estimation applications are used to illustrate the effectiveness of this generic parsimonious modelling approach from data.

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S. CHEN, "Orthogonal-Least-Squares Forward Selection for Parsimonious Modelling from Data," Engineering, Vol. 1 No. 2, 2009, pp. 55-74. doi: 10.4236/eng.2009.12008.

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