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Gradient Boosting×Régression de Huber×LightGBM×
DomaineApprentissage automatiqueStatistiqueApprentissage automatique
FamilleMachine learningRegression modelMachine learning
Année d'origine200119642017
Auteur d'origineFriedman, J. H.Peter J. HuberKe, G. et al. (Microsoft)
TypeEnsemble (sequential boosting of decision trees)Robust linear regression (M-estimation)Gradient boosting decision tree ensemble
Source fondatriceFriedman, J. H. (2001). Greedy Function Approximation: A Gradient Boosting Machine. Annals of Statistics, 29(5), 1189–1232. DOI ↗Huber, P. J. (1964). Robust Estimation of a Location Parameter. Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 35(1), 73-101. DOI ↗Ke, G., Meng, Q., Finley, T., Wang, T., Chen, W., Ma, W., Ye, Q. & Liu, T.-Y. (2017). LightGBM: A Highly Efficient Gradient Boosting Decision Tree. Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS) 30, 3146–3154. link ↗
AliasGradient Boosting (GBM), GBM, gradient boosted trees, gradient boosting machineHuber M-estimator, Huber loss regression, robust regression, Huber RegresyonuLightGBM, Light Gradient Boosting Machine, lgbm, leaf-wise gradient boosting
Apparentées555
RésuméGradient 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.Huber regression is a robust linear regression method, introduced by Peter J. Huber in 1964, that resists the influence of outliers by treating small and large residuals differently. It applies a squared (OLS-like) loss to small residuals and a milder absolute-value loss to large ones, so extreme observations cannot dominate the fit.LightGBM is Microsoft's gradient boosting decision tree implementation, introduced by Ke and colleagues in 2017, that grows trees leaf-wise and bins features into histograms for speed. On large datasets it is much faster than XGBoost while retaining strong predictive accuracy.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Gradient Boosting · Huber Regression · LightGBM. Consulté le 2026-06-18 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare