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COLT
2003
Springer

Preference Elicitation and Query Learning

13 years 9 months ago
Preference Elicitation and Query Learning
Abstract. In this paper we initiate an exploration of relationships between “preference elicitation”, a learning-style problem that arises in combinatorial auctions, and the problem of learning via queries studied in computational learning theory. Preference elicitation is the process of asking questions about the preferences of bidders so as to best divide some set of goods. As a learning problem, it can be thought of as a setting in which there are multiple target concepts that can each be queried separately, but where the goal is not so much to learn each concept as it is to produce an “optimal example”. In this work, we prove a number of similarities and differences between preference elicitation and query learning, giving both separation results and proving some connections between these problems.
Avrim Blum, Jeffrey C. Jackson, Tuomas Sandholm, M
Added 06 Jul 2010
Updated 06 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2003
Where COLT
Authors Avrim Blum, Jeffrey C. Jackson, Tuomas Sandholm, Martin Zinkevich
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