Predictions as Statements and Decisions

Abstract

Prediction is a complex notion, and different predictors (such as people, computer programs, and probabilistic theories) can pursue very different goals. In this talk I will review some popular kinds of prediction and argue that the theory of competitive on-line learning can benefit from the kinds of prediction that are now foreign to it.

Cite

Text

Vovk. "Predictions as Statements and Decisions." Annual Conference on Computational Learning Theory, 2006. doi:10.1007/11776420_3

Markdown

[Vovk. "Predictions as Statements and Decisions." Annual Conference on Computational Learning Theory, 2006.](https://mlanthology.org/colt/2006/vovk2006colt-predictions/) doi:10.1007/11776420_3

BibTeX

@inproceedings{vovk2006colt-predictions,
  title     = {{Predictions as Statements and Decisions}},
  author    = {Vovk, Vladimir},
  booktitle = {Annual Conference on Computational Learning Theory},
  year      = {2006},
  pages     = {4},
  doi       = {10.1007/11776420_3},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/colt/2006/vovk2006colt-predictions/}
}