A New Method of Support Vector Machine for Class Imbalance Problem

Author(s):  
Li Yan ◽  
Danrui Xei ◽  
Zhe Du
Author(s):  
Hartono Hartono ◽  
Opim Salim Sitompul ◽  
Tulus Tulus ◽  
Erna Budhiarti Nababan

Class imbalance occurs when instances in a class are much higher than in other classes. This machine learning major problem can affect the predicted accuracy. Support Vector Machine (SVM) is robust and precise method in handling class imbalance problem but weak in the bias data distribution, Biased Support Vector Machine (BSVM) became popular choice to solve the problem. BSVM provide better control sensitivity yet lack accuracy compared to general SVM. This study proposes the integration of BSVM and SMOTEBoost to handle class imbalance problem. Non Support Vector (NSV) sets from negative samples and Support Vector (SV) sets from positive samples will undergo a Weighted-SMOTE process. The results indicate that implementation of Biased Support Vector Machine and Weighted-SMOTE achieve better accuracy and sensitivity.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoqing Gu ◽  
Tongguang Ni ◽  
Hongyuan Wang

In medical datasets classification, support vector machine (SVM) is considered to be one of the most successful methods. However, most of the real-world medical datasets usually contain some outliers/noise and data often have class imbalance problems. In this paper, a fuzzy support machine (FSVM) for the class imbalance problem (called FSVM-CIP) is presented, which can be seen as a modified class of FSVM by extending manifold regularization and assigning two misclassification costs for two classes. The proposed FSVM-CIP can be used to handle the class imbalance problem in the presence of outliers/noise, and enhance the locality maximum margin. Five real-world medical datasets, breast, heart, hepatitis, BUPA liver, and pima diabetes, from the UCI medical database are employed to illustrate the method presented in this paper. Experimental results on these datasets show the outperformed or comparable effectiveness of FSVM-CIP.


2019 ◽  
Vol 490 (4) ◽  
pp. 5424-5439 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ping Guo ◽  
Fuqing Duan ◽  
Pei Wang ◽  
Yao Yao ◽  
Qian Yin ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Discovering pulsars is a significant and meaningful research topic in the field of radio astronomy. With the advent of astronomical instruments, the volume and rate of data acquisition have grown exponentially. This development necessitates a focus on artificial intelligence (AI) technologies that can mine large astronomical data sets. Automatic pulsar candidate identification (APCI) can be considered as a task determining potential candidates for further investigation and eliminating the noise of radio-frequency interference and other non-pulsar signals. As reported in the existing literature, AI techniques, especially convolutional neural network (CNN)-based techniques, have been adopted for APCI. However, it is challenging to enhance the performance of CNN-based pulsar identification because only an extremely limited number of real pulsar samples exist, which results in a crucial class imbalance problem. To address these problems, we propose a framework that combines a deep convolution generative adversarial network (DCGAN) with a support vector machine (SVM). The DCGAN is used as a sample generation and feature learning model, and the SVM is adopted as the classifier for predicting the label of a candidate at the inference stage. The proposed framework is a novel technique, which not only can solve the class imbalance problem but also can learn the discriminative feature representations of pulsar candidates instead of computing hand-crafted features in the pre-processing steps. The proposed method can enhance the accuracy of the APCI, and the computer experiments performed on two pulsar data sets verified the effectiveness and efficiency of the proposed method.


2022 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 1-37
Author(s):  
Robert A. Sowah ◽  
Bernard Kuditchar ◽  
Godfrey A. Mills ◽  
Amevi Acakpovi ◽  
Raphael A. Twum ◽  
...  

Class imbalance problem is prevalent in many real-world domains. It has become an active area of research. In binary classification problems, imbalance learning refers to learning from a dataset with a high degree of skewness to the negative class. This phenomenon causes classification algorithms to perform woefully when predicting positive classes with new examples. Data resampling, which involves manipulating the training data before applying standard classification techniques, is among the most commonly used techniques to deal with the class imbalance problem. This article presents a new hybrid sampling technique that improves the overall performance of classification algorithms for solving the class imbalance problem significantly. The proposed method called the Hybrid Cluster-Based Undersampling Technique (HCBST) uses a combination of the cluster undersampling technique to under-sample the majority instances and an oversampling technique derived from Sigma Nearest Oversampling based on Convex Combination, to oversample the minority instances to solve the class imbalance problem with a high degree of accuracy and reliability. The performance of the proposed algorithm was tested using 11 datasets from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Metric Data Program data repository and University of California Irvine Machine Learning data repository with varying degrees of imbalance. Results were compared with classification algorithms such as the K-nearest neighbours, support vector machines, decision tree, random forest, neural network, AdaBoost, naïve Bayes, and quadratic discriminant analysis. Tests results revealed that for the same datasets, the HCBST performed better with average performances of 0.73, 0.67, and 0.35 in terms of performance measures of area under curve, geometric mean, and Matthews Correlation Coefficient, respectively, across all the classifiers used for this study. The HCBST has the potential of improving the performance of the class imbalance problem, which by extension, will improve on the various applications that rely on the concept for a solution.


2016 ◽  
Vol 26 (09n10) ◽  
pp. 1571-1580 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ming Cheng ◽  
Guoqing Wu ◽  
Hongyan Wan ◽  
Guoan You ◽  
Mengting Yuan ◽  
...  

Cross-project defect prediction trains a prediction model using historical data from source projects and applies the model to target projects. Most previous efforts assumed the cross-project data have the same metrics set, which means the metrics used and the size of metrics set are the same. However, this assumption may not hold in practical scenarios. In addition, software defect datasets have the class-imbalance problem which increases the difficulty for the learner to predict defects. In this paper, we advance canonical correlation analysis by deriving a joint feature space for associating cross-project data. We also propose a novel support vector machine algorithm which incorporates the correlation transfer information into classifier design for cross-project prediction. Moreover, we take different misclassification costs into consideration to make the classification inclining to classify a module as a defective one, alleviating the impact of imbalanced data. The experimental results show that our method is more effective compared to state-of-the-art methods.


Author(s):  
Khyati Ahlawat ◽  
Anuradha Chug ◽  
Amit Prakash Singh

The uneven distribution of classes in any dataset poses a tendency of biasness toward the majority class when analyzed using any standard classifier. The instances of the significant class being deficient in numbers are generally ignored and their correct classification which is of paramount interest is often overlooked in calculating overall accuracy. Therefore, the conventional machine learning approaches are rigorously refined to address this class imbalance problem. This challenge of imbalanced classes is more prevalent in big data scenario due to its high volume. This study deals with acknowledging a sampling solution based on cluster computing in handling class imbalance problems in the case of big data. The newly proposed approach hybrid sampling algorithm (HSA) is assessed using three popular classification algorithms namely, support vector machine, decision tree and k-nearest neighbor based on balanced accuracy and elapsed time. The results obtained from the experiment are considered promising with an efficiency gain of 42% in comparison to the traditional sampling solution synthetic minority oversampling technique (SMOTE). This work proves the effectiveness of the distribution and clustering principle in imbalanced big data scenarios.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Moraes ◽  
João Francisco Valiati ◽  
Wilson Pires Gavião Neto

Many people make their opinions available on the Internet nowadays, and researchers have been proposing methods to automate the task of classifying textual reviews as positive or negative. Usual supervised learning techniques have been adopted to accomplish such a task. In practice, positive reviews are abundant in comparison to negative's. This context poses challenges to learning-based methods and data undersampling/oversampling are popular preprocessing techniques to overcome the problem. A combination of sampling techniques and learning methods, like Artificial Neural Networks (ANN) or Support Vector Machines (SVM), has been successfully adopted as a classification approach in many areas, while the sentiment classification literature has not explored ANN in studies that involve sampling methods to balance data. Even the performance of SVM, which is widely used as a sentiment learner, has been rarely addressed under the context of a preceding sampling method. This paper addresses document-level sentiment analysis with unbalanced data and focus on empirically assessing the performance of ANN in the context of undersampling the (majority) set of positive reviews. We adopted the performance of SVM as a baseline, since some studies have indicated SVM as being less subject to the class imbalance problem. Results are produced in terms of a traditional bag-of-words model with popular feature selection and weighting methods. Our experiments indicated that SVM are more stable than ANN in highly unbalanced (80%) data scenarios. However, under the discarding of information generated by random undersampling, ANN outperform SVM or produce comparable results.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 962-973 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mario Manzo

In real world applications, binary classification is often affected by imbalanced classes. In this paper, a new methodology to solve the class imbalance problem that occurs in image classification is proposed. A digital image is described through a novel vector-based representation called Kernel Graph Embedding on Attributed Relational Scale-Invariant Feature Transform-based Regions Graph (KGEARSRG). A classification stage using a procedure based on support vector machines (SVMs) is organized. Methodology is evaluated through a series of experiments performed on art painting dataset images, affected by varying imbalance percentages. Experimental results show that the proposed approach consistently outperforms the competitors.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (21) ◽  
pp. 3484 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amin Naboureh ◽  
Hamid Ebrahimy ◽  
Mohsen Azadbakht ◽  
Jinhu Bian ◽  
Meisam Amani

Timely and accurate Land Cover (LC) information is required for various applications, such as climate change analysis and sustainable development. Although machine learning algorithms are most likely successful in LC mapping tasks, the class imbalance problem is known as a common challenge in this regard. This problem occurs during the training phase and reduces classification accuracy for infrequent and rare LC classes. To address this issue, this study proposes a new method by integrating random under-sampling of majority classes and an ensemble of Support Vector Machines, namely Random Under-sampling Ensemble of Support Vector Machines (RUESVMs). The performance of RUESVMs for LC classification was evaluated in Google Earth Engine (GEE) over two different case studies using Sentinel-2 time-series data and five well-known spectral indices, including the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), Green Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (GNDVI), Soil-Adjusted Vegetation Index (SAVI), Normalized Difference Built-up Index (NDBI), and Normalized Difference Water Index (NDWI). The performance of RUESVMs was also compared with the traditional SVM and combination of SVM with three benchmark data balancing techniques namely the Random Over-Sampling (ROS), Random Under-Sampling (RUS), and Synthetic Minority Over-sampling Technique (SMOTE). It was observed that the proposed method considerably improved the accuracy of LC classification, especially for the minority classes. After adopting RUESVMs, the overall accuracy of the generated LC map increased by approximately 4.95 percentage points, and this amount for the geometric mean of producer’s accuracies was almost 3.75 percentage points, in comparison to the most accurate data balancing method (i.e., SVM-SMOTE). Regarding the geometric mean of users’ accuracies, RUESVMs also outperformed the SVM-SMOTE method with an average increase of 6.45 percentage points.


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