ℓ₂-Boosting exhibits benign overfitting with logarithmic excess variance decay Θ(σ²/log(p/n)) under isotropic noise due to ℓ₁ bias, and a subdifferential early stopping rule recovers minimax-optimal ℓ₁ rates.
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4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
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UNVERDICTED 4representative citing papers
α-TCAV replaces TCAV's hard indicator with a tunable smooth function to create a unified probabilistic framework with lower variance and guidance for parameter choice or Bayes-optimal scoring.
ABGD parametrizes piecewise linear functions as difference of max-affine functions and converges linearly to an epsilon-accurate solution with O(d max(sigma/epsilon,1)^2) samples under sub-Gaussian noise, which is minimax optimal up to logs.
A new first-order algorithm for multi-task learning with shared linear representation achieves near-optimal error rates in constant iterations, improving existing methods by a factor of k.
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ℓ₂-Boosting exhibits benign overfitting with logarithmic excess variance decay Θ(σ²/log(p/n)) under isotropic noise due to ℓ₁ bias, and a subdifferential early stopping rule recovers minimax-optimal ℓ₁ rates.
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$\alpha$-TCAV: A Unified Framework for Testing with Concept Activation Vectors
α-TCAV replaces TCAV's hard indicator with a tunable smooth function to create a unified probabilistic framework with lower variance and guidance for parameter choice or Bayes-optimal scoring.
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Locally Near Optimal Piecewise Linear Regression in High Dimensions via Difference of Max-Affine Functions
ABGD parametrizes piecewise linear functions as difference of max-affine functions and converges linearly to an epsilon-accurate solution with O(d max(sigma/epsilon,1)^2) samples under sub-Gaussian noise, which is minimax optimal up to logs.
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Near-optimal and Efficient First-Order Algorithm for Multi-Task Learning with Shared Linear Representation
A new first-order algorithm for multi-task learning with shared linear representation achieves near-optimal error rates in constant iterations, improving existing methods by a factor of k.