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Bekijk de geselecteerde methoden naast elkaar; rijen die verschillen zijn gemarkeerd.

Robuuste Gradient Boosting×Boosting×Random Forest×Reguliere Gradient Boosting×
VakgebiedMachine learningMachine learningMachine learningMachine learning
FamilieMachine learningMachine learningMachine learningMachine learning
Jaar van ontstaan20011990–199720012001 (gradient boosting); 2016 (explicit L1/L2 regularization in XGBoost)
GrondleggerFriedman, J. H. (with Huber loss from Huber, P. J.)Schapire, R. E.; Freund, Y.Breiman, L.Chen, T. & Guestrin, C. (building on Friedman, J. H.)
TypeEnsemble (boosted trees with robust loss)Sequential ensemble (iterative reweighting)Ensemble (bagging of decision trees)Regularized ensemble (additive tree model)
Oorspronkelijke bronFriedman, J. H. (2001). Greedy function approximation: A gradient boosting machine. Annals of Statistics, 29(5), 1189–1232. DOI ↗Freund, Y. & Schapire, R. E. (1997). A decision-theoretic generalization of on-line learning and an application to boosting. Journal of Computer and System Sciences, 55(1), 119–139. DOI ↗Breiman, L. (2001). Random Forests. Machine Learning, 45, 5–32. DOI ↗Chen, T. & Guestrin, C. (2016). XGBoost: A scalable tree boosting system. Proceedings of the 22nd ACM SIGKDD International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining, 785–794. DOI ↗
Aliassengradient boosting with Huber loss, robust GBM, outlier-robust boosting, robust gradient-boosted treesAdaBoost, gradient boosting, iterative reweighting ensemble, sequential ensembleRastgele Orman (Random Forest), rastgele orman, random decision forest, bagged tree ensemblepenalized gradient boosting, shrinkage-regularized boosting, XGBoost-style regularization, L1/L2 gradient boosting
Verwant6646
SamenvattingRobust 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.Boosting is a sequential ensemble technique that converts many simple, barely-better-than-chance learners into a single highly accurate model by repeatedly focusing training on the examples that previous learners got wrong, then combining all learners with weights proportional to their individual accuracy.Random Forest is an ensemble learning method, introduced by Leo Breiman in 2001, that grows many decision trees on bootstrap samples of the data and combines their votes to produce strong classification and regression. By pooling many slightly different trees, it produces more accurate and more stable predictions than any single tree.Regularized gradient boosting extends the classic additive tree ensemble (Friedman 2001) by embedding L1 and L2 penalty terms directly into the training objective, along with a complexity penalty on tree size. Popularized by XGBoost (Chen & Guestrin 2016), this framework reduces overfitting and improves generalization compared to unpenalized boosting, while retaining the method's characteristic accuracy on tabular data.
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ScholarGateMethoden vergelijken: Robust Gradient Boosting · Boosting · Random Forest · Regularized Gradient Boosting. Geraadpleegd op 2026-06-17 via https://scholargate.app/nl/compare