Bayesian one-class SVM
Bayesian one-class SVM combines the classical one-class support vector machine — which learns a tight boundary around normal training examples — with Bayesian inference to produce calibrated probability estimates of anomaly, rather than only a binary flag. This allows uncertainty quantification over the novelty decision, making the approach more suitable when downstream actions depend on how confident the model is that a new observation is anomalous.
Source record
Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.
- Scholkopf, B., Platt, J. C., Shawe-Taylor, J., Smola, A. J., & Williamson, R. C. (2001). Estimating the support of a high-dimensional distribution. Neural Computation, 13(7), 1443–1471. · DOI 10.1162/089976601750264965
- Tipping, M. E. (2001). Sparse Bayesian learning and the relevance vector machine. Journal of Machine Learning Research, 1, 211–244. · URL
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