2009
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-04686-5_35
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Tracking Recurring Concepts with Meta-learners

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Cited by 41 publications
(53 citation statements)
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“…New al gorithms have appeared during the last years Gaber et al (2007); Gama et al (2004);Hulten, Spencer, and Domingos (2001); Street and Kim (2001);Tsymbal (2004);Žliobaite˙ (2010); Widmer and Kubat (1996), but some other related challenges have received far less attention. Such is the case of situations where the same concept or a similar one reappears, and a previous model could be reused to en hance the learning process in terms of accuracy and processing time as in the case of Gama and Kosina (2009);Gomes et al (2010); Katakis et al (2010); Ramamurthy and Bhatnagar (2007); Yang et al (2005);2006).…”
Section: Data Stream Classificationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…New al gorithms have appeared during the last years Gaber et al (2007); Gama et al (2004);Hulten, Spencer, and Domingos (2001); Street and Kim (2001);Tsymbal (2004);Žliobaite˙ (2010); Widmer and Kubat (1996), but some other related challenges have received far less attention. Such is the case of situations where the same concept or a similar one reappears, and a previous model could be reused to en hance the learning process in terms of accuracy and processing time as in the case of Gama and Kosina (2009);Gomes et al (2010); Katakis et al (2010); Ramamurthy and Bhatnagar (2007); Yang et al (2005);2006).…”
Section: Data Stream Classificationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…• Recurring concepts, as a particular type of the aforementioned concept drift (Gama & Kosina, 2009;Katakis et al, 2010;Widmer & Kubat, 1996;Yang et al, 2005) where a previous learned concept is expected to reappear.…”
Section: Motivationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, more sophisticated approaches that exploit this possibility, such as [8,31], store learned models and reuse them when a similar concept reappears in the stream, thus avoiding the effort to relearn a previously observed concept. The method proposed by Yang et al [31] uses a proactive approach to recurring concepts, which means to reuse a concept from the history of concepts.…”
Section: Drift Detectionmentioning
confidence: 99%