Cross-Domain Learning from Multiple Sources: A Consensus Regularization Perspective

  • Authors:
  • Fuzhen Zhuang;Ping Luo;Hui Xiong;Yuhong Xiong;Qing He;Zhongzhi Shi

  • Affiliations:
  • Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing;Hewlett-Packard Labs, Beijing;Rutgers University, Newark;Hewlett-Packard Labs, Beijing;Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing;Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing

  • Venue:
  • IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering
  • Year:
  • 2010

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Abstract

Classification across different domains studies how to adapt a learning model from one domain to another domain which shares similar data characteristics. While there are a number of existing works along this line, many of them are only focused on learning from a single source domain to a target domain. In particular, a remaining challenge is how to apply the knowledge learned from multiple source domains to a target domain. Indeed, data from multiple source domains can be semantically related, but have different data distributions. It is not clear how to exploit the distribution differences among multiple source domains to boost the learning performance in a target domain. To that end, in this paper, we propose a consensus regularization framework for learning from multiple source domains to a target domain. In this framework, a local classifier is trained by considering both local data available in one source domain and the prediction consensus with the classifiers learned from other source domains. Moreover, we provide a theoretical analysis as well as an empirical study of the proposed consensus regularization framework. The experimental results on text categorization and image classification problems show the effectiveness of this consensus regularization learning method. Finally, to deal with the situation that the multiple source domains are geographically distributed, we also develop the distributed version of the proposed algorithm, which avoids the need to upload all the data to a centralized location and helps to mitigate privacy concerns.