Active learning: far from solved
From the post:
As Daniel Hsu and John Langford pointed out recently, there has been a lot of recent progress in active learning. This is to the point where I might actually be tempted to suggest some of these algorithms to people to use in practice, for instance the one John has that learns faster than supervised learning because it’s very careful about what work it performs. That is, in particular, I might suggest that people try it out instead of the usual query-by-uncertainty (QBU) or query-by-committee (QBC). This post is a brief overview of what I understand of the state of the art in active learning (paragraphs 2 and 3) and then a discussion of why I think (a) researchers don’t tend to make much use of active learning and (b) why the problem is far from solved. (a will lead to b.)
This is a deeply interesting article that could give rise to mini and major projects. I particularly like his point about not throwing away training data. No, you have to read the post for yourself. It’s not that long.