Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2012
MACHINE LEARNING IS ALL ABOUT using the right features to build the right models that achieve the right tasks – this is the slogan, visualised in Figure 3 on p.11, with which we ended the Prologue. In essence, features define a ‘language’ in which we describe the relevant objects in our domain, be they e-mails or complex organic molecules. We should not normally have to go back to the domain objects themselves once we have a suitable feature representation, which is why features play such an important role in machine learning. We will take a closer look at them in Section 1.3. A task is an abstract representation of a problem we want to solve regarding those domain objects: the most common form of these is classifying them into two or more classes, but we shall encounter other tasks throughout the book. Many of these tasks can be represented as a mapping from data points to outputs. This mapping or model is itself produced as the output of a machine learning algorithm applied to training data; there is a wide variety of models to choose from, as we shall see in Section 1.2.
We start this chapter by discussing tasks, the problems that can be solved with machine learning. No matter what variety of machine learning models you may encounter, you will find that they are designed to solve one of only a small number of tasks and use only a few different types of features.
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