A Direct Sum Result for the Information Complexity of Learning

April 16, 2018 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐Ÿ› Annual Conference Computational Learning Theory

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Authors Ido Nachum, Jonathan Shafer, Amir Yehudayoff arXiv ID 1804.05474 Category cs.LG: Machine Learning Cross-listed cs.IT, stat.ML Citations 18 Venue Annual Conference Computational Learning Theory Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
How many bits of information are required to PAC learn a class of hypotheses of VC dimension $d$? The mathematical setting we follow is that of Bassily et al. (2018), where the value of interest is the mutual information $\mathrm{I}(S;A(S))$ between the input sample $S$ and the hypothesis outputted by the learning algorithm $A$. We introduce a class of functions of VC dimension $d$ over the domain $\mathcal{X}$ with information complexity at least $ฮฉ\left(d\log \log \frac{|\mathcal{X}|}{d}\right)$ bits for any consistent and proper algorithm (deterministic or random). Bassily et al. proved a similar (but quantitatively weaker) result for the case $d=1$. The above result is in fact a special case of a more general phenomenon we explore. We define the notion of information complexity of a given class of functions $\mathcal{H}$. Intuitively, it is the minimum amount of information that an algorithm for $\mathcal{H}$ must retain about its input to ensure consistency and properness. We prove a direct sum result for information complexity in this context; roughly speaking, the information complexity sums when combining several classes.
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