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Algorithmic statistics, prediction and machine learning

Machine Learning 2015-09-21 v1 Information Theory math.IT

Abstract

Algorithmic statistics considers the following problem: given a binary string xx (e.g., some experimental data), find a "good" explanation of this data. It uses algorithmic information theory to define formally what is a good explanation. In this paper we extend this framework in two directions. First, the explanations are not only interesting in themselves but also used for prediction: we want to know what kind of data we may reasonably expect in similar situations (repeating the same experiment). We show that some kind of hierarchy can be constructed both in terms of algorithmic statistics and using the notion of a priori probability, and these two approaches turn out to be equivalent. Second, a more realistic approach that goes back to machine learning theory, assumes that we have not a single data string xx but some set of "positive examples" x1,,xlx_1,\ldots,x_l that all belong to some unknown set AA, a property that we want to learn. We want this set AA to contain all positive examples and to be as small and simple as possible. We show how algorithmic statistic can be extended to cover this situation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1509.05473,
  title  = {Algorithmic statistics, prediction and machine learning},
  author = {Alexey Milovanov},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1509.05473},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

22 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-22T10:59:25.972Z