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COLT
2007
Springer

U-Shaped, Iterative, and Iterative-with-Counter Learning

13 years 10 months ago
U-Shaped, Iterative, and Iterative-with-Counter Learning
This paper solves an important problem left open in the literature by showing that U-shapes are unnecessary in iterative learning. A U-shape occurs when a learner first learns, then unlearns, and, finally, relearns, some target concept. Iterative learning is a Gold-style learning model in which each of a learner’s output conjectures depends only upon the learner’s most recent conjecture and input element. Previous results had shown, for example, that U-shapes are unnecessary for explanatory learning, but are necessary for behaviorally correct learning. Work on the aforementioned problem led to the consideration of an iterative-like learning model, in which each of a learner’s conjectures may, in addition, depend upon the number of elements so far presented to the learner. Learners in this new model are strictly more powerful than traditional iterative learners, yet not as powerful as full explanatory learners. Can any class of languages learnable in this new model be learned w...
John Case, Samuel E. Moelius
Added 07 Jun 2010
Updated 07 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where COLT
Authors John Case, Samuel E. Moelius
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