SVM and Neural Network

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春和景丽
春和景丽 2021-01-30 02:49

What is difference between SVM and Neural Network? Is it true that linear svm is same NN, and for non-linear separable problems, NN uses adding hidden layers and SVM uses changi

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  •  一生所求
    2021-01-30 03:05

    There are two parts to this question. The first part is "what is the form of function learned by these methods?" For NN and SVM this is typically the same. For example, a single hidden layer neural network uses exactly the same form of model as an SVM. That is:

    Given an input vector x, the output is: output(x) = sum_over_all_i weight_i * nonlinear_function_i(x)

    Generally the nonlinear functions will also have some parameters. So these methods need to learn how many nonlinear functions should be used, what their parameters are, and what the value of all the weight_i weights should be.

    Therefore, the difference between a SVM and a NN is in how they decide what these parameters should be set to. Usually when someone says they are using a neural network they mean they are trying to find the parameters which minimize the mean squared prediction error with respect to a set of training examples. They will also almost always be using the stochastic gradient descent optimization algorithm to do this. SVM's on the other hand try to minimize both training error and some measure of "hypothesis complexity". So they will find a set of parameters that fits the data but also is "simple" in some sense. You can think of it like Occam's razor for machine learning. The most common optimization algorithm used with SVMs is sequential minimal optimization.

    Another big difference between the two methods is that stochastic gradient descent isn't guaranteed to find the optimal set of parameters when used the way NN implementations employ it. However, any decent SVM implementation is going to find the optimal set of parameters. People like to say that neural networks get stuck in a local minima while SVMs don't.

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