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AI & Statistics Seminar: Test Strategies for Cost-Sensitive Decision Trees
Speaker: Prof. Charles Ling University of Western Ontario, Canada Topic: "AI & Statistics Seminar: Test Strategies for Cost-Sensitive Decision Trees" Date: Tuesday, 1 June 2005 Time: 10:30 am - 11:30am Venue: Room 3464 (Joint Conference, via lift nos. 25/26) HKUST Abstract: In medical diagnosis doctors must often determine what tests (e.g., blood tests) should be ordered for a patient to minimize the total cost of tests and misclassifications (misdiagnosis). In this talk, we model this learning and test process that incorporates both test costs and misclassification costs. In particular, we first propose a lazy decision tree learning algorithm that minimizes the total cost of tests and misclassifications. Then we design several novel test strategies which attempt to minimize the total cost for new test examples (new patients). We empirically evaluate our strategies, and show that they are very effective. Our results can be readily applied to real-world diagnosis tasks, such as medical diagnosis. A case study on heart disease is given. If time allows, we will also talk about the role of missing values in cost-sensitive learning. This is a joint work with Drs. Qiang Yang, Shichao Zhang, and Shengli Sheng. Parts of the work were published in ICML'04 and IEEE TKDE (2005). *********************** Biography: Professor Charles Ling earned his Msc and PhD from the Department of Computer Science at Univ of Pennsylvania in 1987 and 1989 respectively. Since then he has been a faculty member in Computer Science at University of Western Ontario. His main research areas include machine learning, data mining, and cognitive modeling. He has published over 100 research papers in journals (such as Machine Learning, JAIR, JMLR, JKDD, IEEE TKDE, and Bioinformatics) and international conferences (such as IJCAI, KDD, ICDM, and ICML). He is also the Director of Data Mining Lab, leading data mining development in CRM, Bioinformatics, and the Internet. He has managed several major data-mining projects for banks and insurance companies in Canada. See http://www.csd.uwo.ca/faculty/cling for more info.