On Ordinal VC-Dimension and Some Notions of Complexity


Autoria(s): Martin, Eric; Sharma, Arun; Stephan, Fran
Data(s)

2006

Resumo

We generalize the classical notion of Vapnik–Chernovenkis (VC) dimension to ordinal VC-dimension, in the context of logical learning paradigms. Logical learning paradigms encompass the numerical learning paradigms commonly studied in Inductive Inference. A logical learning paradigm is defined as a set W of structures over some vocabulary, and a set D of first-order formulas that represent data. The sets of models of ϕ in W, where ϕ varies over D, generate a natural topology W over W. We show that if D is closed under boolean operators, then the notion of ordinal VC-dimension offers a perfect characterization for the problem of predicting the truth of the members of D in a member of W, with an ordinal bound on the number of mistakes. This shows that the notion of VC-dimension has a natural interpretation in Inductive Inference, when cast into a logical setting. We also study the relationships between predictive complexity, selective complexity—a variation on predictive complexity—and mind change complexity. The assumptions that D is closed under boolean operators and that W is compact often play a crucial role to establish connections between these concepts. We then consider a computable setting with effective versions of the complexity measures, and show that the equivalence between ordinal VC-dimension and predictive complexity fails. More precisely, we prove that the effective ordinal VC-dimension of a paradigm can be defined when all other effective notions of complexity are undefined. On a better note, when W is compact, all effective notions of complexity are defined, though they are not related as in the noncomputable version of the framework.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/23758/

Publicador

Elsevier Science BV

Relação

DOI:10.1016/j.tcs.2006.07.041

Martin, Eric, Sharma, Arun, & Stephan, Fran (2006) On Ordinal VC-Dimension and Some Notions of Complexity. Theoretical Computer Science, 364(1), pp. 62-76.

Fonte

Faculty of Science and Technology

Palavras-Chave #Generalized VC-dimension; Inductive inference; Predictive complexity
Tipo

Journal Article