Publication
Larger Residuals, Less Work: Active Document Scheduling for Latent Dirichlet Allocation
Mirwaes Wahabzada; Kristian Kersting
In: Dimitrios Gunopulos; Thomas Hofmann; Donato Malerba; Michalis Vazirgiannis (Hrsg.). Machine Learning and Knowledge Discovery in Databases - European Conference. European Conference on Machine Learning and Principles and Practice of Knowledge Discovery in Databases (ECML PKDD-2011), September 5-9, Athens, Greece, Pages 475-490, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Vol. 6913, Springer, 2011.
Abstract
Recently, there have been considerable advances in fast inference for latent Dirichlet allocation (LDA). In particular, stochastic optimization of the variational Bayes (VB) objective function with a natural gradient step was proved to converge and able to process massive document collections. To reduce noise in the gradient estimation, it considers multiple documents chosen uniformly at random. While it is widely recognized that the scheduling of documents in stochastic optimization may have significant consequences, this issue remains largely unexplored. In this work, we address this issue. Specifically, we propose residual LDA, a novel, easy-to-implement, LDA approach that schedules documents in an informed way. Intuitively, in each iteration, residual LDA actively selects documents that exert a disproportionately large influence on the current residual to compute the next update. On several real-world datasets, including 3M articles from Wikipedia, we demonstrate that residual LDA can handily analyze massive document collections and find topic models as good or better than those found with batch VB and randomly scheduled VB, and significantly faster.