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Algorithmic Learning Theory

15th International Conference, ALT 2004, Padova, Italy, October 2-5, 2004. Proceedings

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2004

Overview

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 3244)

Part of the book sub series: Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence (LNAI)

Included in the following conference series:

Conference proceedings info: ALT 2004.

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Table of contents (37 papers)

  1. Invited Papers

  2. Regular Contributions

    1. PAC Learning and Boosting

    2. Statistical Supervised Learning

    3. Statistical Analysis of Unlabeled Data

Other volumes

  1. Algorithmic Learning Theory

Keywords

About this book

Algorithmic learning theory is mathematics about computer programs which learn from experience. This involves considerable interaction between various mathematical disciplines including theory of computation, statistics, and c- binatorics. There is also considerable interaction with the practical, empirical ?elds of machine and statistical learning in which a principal aim is to predict, from past data about phenomena, useful features of future data from the same phenomena. The papers in this volume cover a broad range of topics of current research in the ?eld of algorithmic learning theory. We have divided the 29 technical, contributed papers in this volume into eight categories (corresponding to eight sessions) re?ecting this broad range. The categories featured are Inductive Inf- ence, Approximate Optimization Algorithms, Online Sequence Prediction, S- tistical Analysis of Unlabeled Data, PAC Learning & Boosting, Statistical - pervisedLearning,LogicBasedLearning,andQuery&ReinforcementLearning. Below we give a brief overview of the ?eld, placing each of these topics in the general context of the ?eld. Formal models of automated learning re?ect various facets of the wide range of activities that can be viewed as learning. A ?rst dichotomy is between viewing learning as an inde?nite process and viewing it as a ?nite activity with a de?ned termination. Inductive Inference models focus on inde?nite learning processes, requiring only eventual success of the learner to converge to a satisfactory conclusion.

Editors and Affiliations

  • David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science University of Waterloo,  

    Shoham Ben-David

  • Department of Computer & Information Sciences, University of Delaware, Newark

    John Case

  • Dept. of Information Technology and Electronics, Ishinomaki Senshu University,  

    Akira Maruoka

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