Comparar métodos
Examine os métodos selecionados lado a lado; as linhas que diferem ficam destacadas.
| Detecção de Anomalias por Autoencoder Explicável× | Detecção de Anomalias por Autoencoder Auto-supervisionado× | |
|---|---|---|
| Área | Aprendizado de máquina | Aprendizado de máquina |
| Família | Machine learning | Machine learning |
| Ano de origem≠ | 2017-2019 | 2018–2020 |
| Autor original≠ | Combination of autoencoder anomaly detection (Hinton & Salakhutdinov, 2006) and XAI methods (e.g., Lundberg & Lee, 2017) | Golan & El-Yaniv; broader self-supervised anomaly detection community |
| Tipo≠ | Unsupervised anomaly detection with post-hoc or intrinsic explainability | Unsupervised / self-supervised deep learning |
| Fonte seminal≠ | Lundberg, S. M., & Lee, S.-I. (2017). A unified approach to interpreting model predictions. Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems, 30. link ↗ | Golan, I. & El-Yaniv, R. (2018). Deep one-class classification via geometric transformations. Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS), 31. link ↗ |
| Outros nomes | XAI autoencoder anomaly detection, interpretable autoencoder anomaly detection, explainable deep anomaly detection, SHAP-autoencoder anomaly detection | SSL Autoencoder anomaly detection, self-supervised reconstruction anomaly detection, pretext-task autoencoder anomaly detection, contrastive autoencoder anomaly detection |
| Relacionados | 6 | 6 |
| Resumo≠ | Explainable Autoencoder Anomaly Detection augments a standard autoencoder-based anomaly detector with an interpretability layer — such as SHAP values or feature-wise reconstruction error decomposition — that identifies which input features drove the anomaly flag for each observation, turning an opaque reconstruction-error score into an actionable, human-readable explanation. | Self-supervised autoencoder anomaly detection trains an autoencoder using self-supervised pretext tasks — such as predicting geometric transformations or solving jigsaw puzzles — on unlabeled normal data, then flags as anomalous any input whose reconstruction error or pretext-task score deviates substantially from the learned normal distribution. |
| ScholarGateConjunto de dados ↗ |
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