Gaussian mixture model--maximum likelihood
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I have 3 classes and I modeled the GMM for those classes with 12 components for each model.
Now I have a data from one of the 3 classes. I want to find out the class that the data belongs to. I tried finding out the likelihood but I don't know how to proceed next to make the decision.
I have about 12 likelihood values for each class. What should I do next?
Antworten (4)
Walter Roberson
am 16 Okt. 2011
Bearbeitet: John Kelly
am 27 Feb. 2015
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I would suggest reading the File Exchange contribution http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/18785
3 Kommentare
i Venky
am 16 Okt. 2011
i Venky
am 16 Okt. 2011
Walter Roberson
am 17 Okt. 2011
What happened when you tried that file?
I never make a statement about which technique is "best" for something. There are always other techniques that I haven't heard of, or perhaps which have not been invented yet, or which might happen to be faster or more accurate for your *particular* situation even if they are provably less accurate in general. The concept of "best" means different things to different people. For example, you probably would not think very much of a technique that could promise 100% accuracy but took 17.89 million years to execute.
i Venky
am 16 Okt. 2011
i Venky
am 17 Okt. 2011
0 Stimmen
3 Kommentare
Walter Roberson
am 17 Okt. 2011
My team of substitute sleepers get Sunday evening off, so I have to do the sleeping myself.
i Venky
am 4 Nov. 2011
Jan
am 4 Nov. 2011
@i Venky: Walter asked: "What happened when you tried that file?"
Walter Roberson
am 4 Nov. 2011
0 Stimmen
What you should do is apply a distance function to find the "distance" between any given sample and the centroids of the 3 classes. The class with the lowest distance has the greatest probability of being the class the sample is a member of.
A simple distance function is Euclidean distance. It is not used that much in classification questions: instead more common is to use a metric that takes in to account the covariance matrices. For example, using the Anderson-Bahadur metric is common.
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