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Gradient Boosting×Regulariseret Boosting×Robust Gradient Boosting×
FagområdeMaskinlæringMaskinlæringMaskinlæring
FamilieMachine learningMachine learningMachine learning
Oprindelsesår20012001–20162001
OphavspersonFriedman, J. H.Friedman, J. H.; extended by Chen & GuestrinFriedman, J. H. (with Huber loss from Huber, P. J.)
TypeEnsemble (sequential boosting of decision trees)Regularized ensemble (boosting with shrinkage/penalty)Ensemble (boosted trees with robust loss)
Oprindelig kildeFriedman, J. H. (2001). Greedy Function Approximation: A Gradient Boosting Machine. Annals of Statistics, 29(5), 1189–1232. DOI ↗Friedman, J. H. (2001). Greedy function approximation: A gradient boosting machine. Annals of Statistics, 29(5), 1189–1232. DOI ↗Friedman, J. H. (2001). Greedy function approximation: A gradient boosting machine. Annals of Statistics, 29(5), 1189–1232. DOI ↗
AliasserGradient Boosting (GBM), GBM, gradient boosted trees, gradient boosting machineshrinkage boosting, penalized boosting, regularized gradient boosting, L1/L2 boostinggradient boosting with Huber loss, robust GBM, outlier-robust boosting, robust gradient-boosted trees
Relaterede556
ResuméGradient Boosting is an ensemble learning method, formalised by Jerome H. Friedman in 2001, that combines a sequence of weak learners — typically shallow decision trees — so that each new tree is fitted to minimise the residual errors of the trees before it. It is the core algorithm behind popular implementations such as XGBoost, LightGBM and CatBoost.Regularized boosting extends gradient boosting by adding explicit controls — shrinkage (learning rate), L1/L2 weight penalties, subsampling, and tree-complexity limits — to the objective function and the update rule. These constraints reduce overfitting, stabilise the model on noisy or small datasets, and are the core reason why systems such as XGBoost and LightGBM consistently outperform vanilla boosting on real-world tabular benchmarks.Robust Gradient Boosting is gradient boosting trained with outlier-resistant loss functions — most commonly the Huber loss or quantile (pinball) loss — instead of squared-error loss. Proposed in Friedman's seminal 2001 paper, this variant produces predictions far less distorted by extreme values or contaminated labels, while retaining the full predictive power of gradient-boosted trees.
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ScholarGateSammenlign metoder: Gradient Boosting · Regularized Boosting · Robust Gradient Boosting. Hentet 2026-06-17 fra https://scholargate.app/da/compare