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The Neyman-Pearson (NP) approach to hypothesis testing is useful in situations where different types of error have different consequences or a priori probabilities are unknown. For any /spl alpha/>0, the NP lemma specifies the most powerful test of size /spl alpha/, but assumes the distributions for each hypothesis are known or (in some cases) the likelihood ratio is monotonic in an unknown parameter. This paper investigates an extension of NP theory to situations in which one has no knowledge of the underlying distributions except for a collection of independent and identically distributed (i.i.d.) training examples from each hypothesis. Building on a "fundamental lemma" of Cannon et al., we demonstrate that several concepts from statistical learning theory have counterparts in the NP context. Specifically, we consider constrained versions of empirical risk minimization (NP-ERM) and structural risk minimization (NP-SRM), and prove performance guarantees for both. General conditions are given under which NP-SRM leads to strong universal consistency. We also apply NP-SRM to (dyadic) decision trees to derive rates of convergence. Finally, we present explicit algorithms to implement NP-SRM for histograms and dyadic decision trees.
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Clayton Scott
Robert D. Nowak
IEEE Transactions on Information Theory
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Rice University
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Scott et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d808ee5c3030ff03d18c35 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/tit.2005.856955
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