ScholarGate
Assistent

Võrdle meetodeid

Vaata valitud meetodeid kõrvuti; erinevad read on esile tõstetud.

Curriculum Learning×Aktiivne õppimine×Mitmeülesandeõpe×
ValdkondSüvaõpeMasinõpeSüvaõpe
PerekondMachine learningMachine learningMachine learning
Tekkeaasta200920091997
LoojaYoshua Bengio et al.Burr SettlesRich Caruana
TüüpTraining strategyInteractive supervised learning frameworkInductive transfer method
AlgallikasBengio, Y., Louradour, J., Collobert, R., & Weston, J. (2009). Curriculum learning. International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML), 41–48. DOI ↗Settles, B. (2009). Active learning literature survey. University of Wisconsin-Madison Computer Sciences Technical Report 1648. link ↗Caruana, R. (1997). Multitask learning. Machine Learning, 28(1), 41–75. DOI ↗
RööpnimetusedScheduled Training, Difficulty-Based Training, Self-Paced Learning, Müfredat ÖğrenimiQuery Learning, Optimal Experimental Design (ML context), Pool-Based Active Learning, Aktif ÖğrenmeMTL, Joint Learning, Shared Representation Learning, Çok Görevli Öğrenme
Seotud323
KokkuvõteCurriculum Learning is a training strategy for machine learning models, introduced by Bengio et al. in 2009, in which training examples are presented in a meaningful order—typically from easy to hard—rather than at random. Inspired by how humans and animals learn progressively, it organizes training data into a curriculum that starts with simpler, cleaner, or more representative samples and gradually introduces harder or more complex examples as the model matures.Active learning is an iterative machine-learning paradigm in which a learning algorithm selectively queries an oracle — typically a human annotator — for labels on the most informative unlabeled examples. Formalized by Burr Settles in his seminal 2009 literature survey, active learning addresses the practical bottleneck of annotation cost by achieving high model accuracy with far fewer labeled examples than passive supervised learning requires.Multitask Learning (MTL) is a machine learning paradigm in which a model is trained simultaneously on multiple related tasks, sharing representations across them to improve generalization. Introduced formally by Rich Caruana in 1997, MTL draws on the intuition that auxiliary tasks act as inductive bias, providing extra supervision signals that help the shared layers learn richer, more robust feature representations than single-task training would yield.
ScholarGateAndmestik
  1. v1
  2. 1 Allikad
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 1 Allikad
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 1 Allikad
  3. PUBLISHED

Mine otsingusse Laadi slaidid alla

ScholarGateVõrdle meetodeid: Curriculum Learning · Active Learning · Multitask Learning. Loetud 2026-06-15 aadressilt https://scholargate.app/et/compare