Abstract

Few-shot and one-shot learning have been the subject of active and intensive research in recent years, with mounting evidence pointing to successful implementation and exploitation of few-shot learning algorithms in practice. Classical statistical learning theories do not fully explain why few- or one-shot learning is at all possible since traditional generalisation bounds normally require large training and testing samples to be meaningful. This sharply contrasts with numerous examples of successful one- and few-shot learning systems and applications. In this work we present mathematical foundations for a theory of one-shot and few-shot learning and reveal conditions specifying when such learning schemes are likely to succeed. Our theory is based on intrinsic properties of high-dimensional spaces. We show that if the ambient or latent decision space of a learning machine is sufficiently high-dimensional than a large class of objects in this space can indeed be easily learned from few examples provided that certain data non-concentration conditions are met. In this work we present mathematical foundations for a theory of one-shot and few-shot learning and reveal conditions specifying when such learning schemes are likely to succeed. Our theory is based on intrinsic properties of high-dimensional spaces. We show that if the ambient or latent decision space of a learning machine is sufficiently high-dimensional than a large class of objects in this space can indeed be easily learned from few examples provided that certain data non-concentration conditions are met.

Keywords:
Shot (pellet) Computer science Artificial intelligence Space (punctuation) Class (philosophy) Machine learning Active learning (machine learning)

Metrics

22
Cited By
2.54
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
26
Refs
0.91
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Domain Adaptation and Few-Shot Learning
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Artificial Intelligence
Machine Learning and Algorithms
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Artificial Intelligence
Machine Learning and ELM
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Artificial Intelligence

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