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| Modellkalibrierung× | Logistische Regression× | |
|---|---|---|
| Fachgebiet≠ | Maschinelles Lernen | Forschungsstatistik |
| Familie≠ | Machine learning | Process / pipeline |
| Entstehungsjahr≠ | 2017 | 1958 |
| Urheber≠ | Platt; Guo et al. | David Roxbee Cox |
| Typ≠ | Post-hoc probability correction technique | Method |
| Wegweisende Quelle≠ | Guo, C., Pleiss, G., Sun, Y., & Weinberger, K. Q. (2017). On calibration of modern neural networks. International Conference on Machine Learning, 1321–1330. link ↗ | Cox, D. R. (1958). The regression analysis of binary sequences. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series B, 20(2), 215–242. DOI ↗ |
| Aliasnamen≠ | Classifier Calibration, Probability Calibration, Score Calibration, Model Kalibrasyonu | logit model, binomial logistic regression, LR |
| Verwandt | 3 | 3 |
| Zusammenfassung≠ | Model calibration is a post-hoc technique that adjusts the probability outputs of a trained classifier so that predicted confidence scores match empirical outcome frequencies. A classifier is said to be perfectly calibrated if, among all predictions made with confidence p, exactly a fraction p of them are correct. Systematic miscalibration of modern deep neural networks was rigorously documented by Guo et al. (2017), who showed that networks trained with standard cross-entropy loss tend to be overconfident, and proposed temperature scaling as a simple, effective remedy. | Logistic regression is a statistical method for modeling the probability of a binary outcome (disease present/absent, success/failure) as a function of continuous and categorical predictors. Developed by David Roxbee Cox (1958), it solves the problem of predicting categorical outcomes by applying a logistic transformation to constrain predictions to the [0,1] probability interval, enabling accurate risk stratification, diagnostic prediction, and causal inference in epidemiology, medicine, and social science. |
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