As a guest user you are not logged in or recognized by your IP address. You have
access to the Front Matter, Abstracts, Author Index, Subject Index and the full
text of Open Access publications.
In multi-stage processes, decisions happen in an ordered sequence of stages. Many of them have the structure of dual funnel problem: as the sample size decreases from one stage to the other, the information increases. A related example is a selection process, where applicants apply for a position, prize or grant. In each stage, more applicants are evaluated and filtered out and from the remaining ones, more information is collected. In the last stage, decision-makers use all available information to make their final decision. To train a classifier for each stage becomes impracticable as they can underfit due to the low dimensionality in early stages or overfit due to the small sample size in the latter stages. In this work, we proposed a Multi-StaGe Transfer Learning (MSGTL) approach that uses knowledge from simple classifiers trained in early stages to improve the performance of classifiers in the latter stages. By transferring weights from simpler neural networks trained in larger datasets, we able to fine-tune more complex neural networks in the latter stages without overfitting due to the small sample size. We show that is possible to control the trade-off between conserving knowledge and fine-tuning using a simple probabilistic map. Experiments using real-world data show the efficacy of our approach as it outperforms other state-of-the-art methods for transfer learning and regularization.
This website uses cookies
We use cookies to provide you with the best possible experience. They also allow us to analyze user behavior in order to constantly improve the website for you. Info about the privacy policy of IOS Press.
This website uses cookies
We use cookies to provide you with the best possible experience. They also allow us to analyze user behavior in order to constantly improve the website for you. Info about the privacy policy of IOS Press.