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What is the difference between supervised learning and unsupervised learning? [closed]

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In terms of artificial intelligence and machine learning, what is the difference between supervised and unsupervised learning? Can you provide a basic, easy explanation with an example?


E
Edster

Since you ask this very basic question, it looks like it's worth specifying what Machine Learning itself is.

Machine Learning is a class of algorithms which is data-driven, i.e. unlike "normal" algorithms it is the data that "tells" what the "good answer" is. Example: a hypothetical non-machine learning algorithm for face detection in images would try to define what a face is (round skin-like-colored disk, with dark area where you expect the eyes etc). A machine learning algorithm would not have such coded definition, but would "learn-by-examples": you'll show several images of faces and not-faces and a good algorithm will eventually learn and be able to predict whether or not an unseen image is a face.

This particular example of face detection is supervised, which means that your examples must be labeled, or explicitly say which ones are faces and which ones aren't.

In an unsupervised algorithm your examples are not labeled, i.e. you don't say anything. Of course, in such a case the algorithm itself cannot "invent" what a face is, but it can try to cluster the data into different groups, e.g. it can distinguish that faces are very different from landscapes, which are very different from horses.

Since another answer mentions it (though, in an incorrect way): there are "intermediate" forms of supervision, i.e. semi-supervised and active learning. Technically, these are supervised methods in which there is some "smart" way to avoid a large number of labeled examples. In active learning, the algorithm itself decides which thing you should label (e.g. it can be pretty sure about a landscape and a horse, but it might ask you to confirm if a gorilla is indeed the picture of a face). In semi-supervised learning, there are two different algorithms which start with the labeled examples, and then "tell" each other the way they think about some large number of unlabeled data. From this "discussion" they learn.


@ChuckTesta No, this is totally different. We can also find some research about online active learning.
@ChuckTesta Active Learning is a subset of Online Learning. In the case of online learning, the algorithm receives data in a sequential order (stream) as opposed to batch learning where the algorithm learns on the entire dataset as a whole. Additionally, in active learning the algorithm decides which incoming data point to learn from (query it's label from the oracle). In case of learning cost constraints (presence of a querying budget), active learning generally outperforms several online learning algorithms.
Please notice that this thread is currently discussed in Meta, with the question of migrating it to Cross Validated; you may want to have a look (and possibly chime in): meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/404799/…
n
nbro

Supervised learning is when the data you feed your algorithm with is "tagged" or "labelled", to help your logic make decisions.

Example: Bayes spam filtering, where you have to flag an item as spam to refine the results.

Unsupervised learning are types of algorithms that try to find correlations without any external inputs other than the raw data.

Example: data mining clustering algorithms.


U
Uri Goren

Supervised learning

Applications in which the training data comprises examples of the input vectors along with their corresponding target vectors are known as supervised learning problems.

Unsupervised learning

In other pattern recognition problems, the training data consists of a set of input vectors x without any corresponding target values. The goal in such unsupervised learning problems may be to discover groups of similar examples within the data, where it is called clustering

Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning (Bishop, 2006)


Would you please illustrate between input vectors versus target vectors?
n
nbro

In supervised learning, the input x is provided with the expected outcome y (i.e., the output the model is supposed to produce when the input is x), which is often called the "class" (or "label") of the corresponding input x.

In unsupervised learning, the "class" of an example x is not provided. So, unsupervised learning can be thought of as finding "hidden structure" in unlabelled data set.

Approaches to supervised learning include:

Classification (1R, Naive Bayes, decision tree learning algorithm, such as ID3 CART, and so on)

Numeric Value Prediction

Approaches to unsupervised learning include:

Clustering (K-means, hierarchical clustering)

Association Rule Learning


Please notice that this thread is currently discussed in Meta, with the question of migrating it to Cross Validated; you may want to have a look (and possibly chime in): meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/404799/…
n
nbro

I can tell you an example.

Suppose you need to recognize which vehicle is a car and which one is a motorcycle.

In the supervised learning case, your input (training) dataset needs to be labelled, that is, for each input element in your input (training) dataset, you should specify if it represents a car or a motorcycle.

In the unsupervised learning case, you do not label the inputs. The unsupervised model clusters the input into clusters based e.g. on similar features/properties. So, in this case, there is are no labels like "car".


G
Gregory Pakosz

For instance, very often training a neural network is supervised learning: you're telling the network to which class corresponds the feature vector you're feeding.

Clustering is unsupervised learning: you let the algorithm decide how to group samples into classes that share common properties.

Another example of unsupervised learning is Kohonen's self organizing maps.


S
Stompchicken

I have always found the distinction between unsupervised and supervised learning to be arbitrary and a little confusing. There is no real distinction between the two cases, instead there is a range of situations in which an algorithm can have more or less 'supervision'. The existence of semi-supervised learning is an obvious examples where the line is blurred.

I tend to think of supervision as giving feedback to the algorithm about what solutions should be preferred. For a traditional supervised setting, such as spam detection, you tell the algorithm "don't make any mistakes on the training set"; for a traditional unsupervised setting, such as clustering, you tell the algorithm "points that are close to each other should be in the same cluster". It just so happens that, the first form of feedback is a lot more specific than the latter.

In short, when someone says 'supervised', think classification, when they say 'unsupervised' think clustering and try not to worry too much about it beyond that.


The distinction is actually well defined and simple. See David Robles answer.
That definition is okay as far as it goes, but it's too narrow. What abut semi-supervised learning? It's both supervised and unsupervised. What about conditioning on a prior in Bayesian inference? Surely that's a form of supervision. What about the kind of inference used in machine translation with a (unsupervised) language model and (sort-of supervised?) set of aligned sentence pairs? 'Supervision' is just another form of inductive bias.
I see your point, and find it quite interesting. However, I would not worry that much. The classic unsupervised/supervised distinction gets most of the cases.
S
Sabir Al Fateh

Supervised Learning

Supervised learning is based on training a data sample from data source with correct classification already assigned. Such techniques are utilized in feedforward or MultiLayer Perceptron (MLP) models. These MLP has three distinctive characteristics:

One or more layers of hidden neurons that are not part of the input or output layers of the network that enable the network to learn and solve any complex problems The nonlinearity reflected in the neuronal activity is differentiable and, The interconnection model of the network exhibits a high degree of connectivity.

These characteristics along with learning through training solve difficult and diverse problems. Learning through training in a supervised ANN model also called as error backpropagation algorithm. The error correction-learning algorithm trains the network based on the input-output samples and finds error signal, which is the difference of the output calculated and the desired output and adjusts the synaptic weights of the neurons that is proportional to the product of the error signal and the input instance of the synaptic weight. Based on this principle, error back propagation learning occurs in two passes:

Forward Pass:

Here, input vector is presented to the network. This input signal propagates forward, neuron by neuron through the network and emerges at the output end of the network as output signal: y(n) = φ(v(n)) where v(n) is the induced local field of a neuron defined by v(n) =Σ w(n)y(n). The output that is calculated at the output layer o(n) is compared with the desired response d(n) and finds the error e(n) for that neuron. The synaptic weights of the network during this pass are remains same.

Backward Pass:

The error signal that is originated at the output neuron of that layer is propagated backward through network. This calculates the local gradient for each neuron in each layer and allows the synaptic weights of the network to undergo changes in accordance with the delta rule as:

Δw(n) = η * δ(n) * y(n).

This recursive computation is continued, with forward pass followed by the backward pass for each input pattern till the network is converged.

Supervised learning paradigm of an ANN is efficient and finds solutions to several linear and non-linear problems such as classification, plant control, forecasting, prediction, robotics etc.

Unsupervised Learning

Self-Organizing neural networks learn using unsupervised learning algorithm to identify hidden patterns in unlabelled input data. This unsupervised refers to the ability to learn and organize information without providing an error signal to evaluate the potential solution. The lack of direction for the learning algorithm in unsupervised learning can sometime be advantageous, since it lets the algorithm to look back for patterns that have not been previously considered. The main characteristics of Self-Organizing Maps (SOM) are:

It transforms an incoming signal pattern of arbitrary dimension into one or 2 dimensional map and perform this transformation adaptively The network represents feedforward structure with a single computational layer consisting of neurons arranged in rows and columns. At each stage of representation, each input signal is kept in its proper context and, Neurons dealing with closely related pieces of information are close together and they communicate through synaptic connections.

The computational layer is also called as competitive layer since the neurons in the layer compete with each other to become active. Hence, this learning algorithm is called competitive algorithm. Unsupervised algorithm in SOM works in three phases:

Competition phase:

for each input pattern x, presented to the network, inner product with synaptic weight w is calculated and the neurons in the competitive layer finds a discriminant function that induce competition among the neurons and the synaptic weight vector that is close to the input vector in the Euclidean distance is announced as winner in the competition. That neuron is called best matching neuron,

i.e. x = arg min ║x - w║.

Cooperative phase:

the winning neuron determines the center of a topological neighborhood h of cooperating neurons. This is performed by the lateral interaction d among the cooperative neurons. This topological neighborhood reduces its size over a time period.

Adaptive phase:

enables the winning neuron and its neighborhood neurons to increase their individual values of the discriminant function in relation to the input pattern through suitable synaptic weight adjustments,

 Δw = ηh(x)(x –w).

Upon repeated presentation of the training patterns, the synaptic weight vectors tend to follow the distribution of the input patterns due to the neighborhood updating and thus ANN learns without supervisor.

Self-Organizing Model naturally represents the neuro-biological behavior, and hence is used in many real world applications such as clustering, speech recognition, texture segmentation, vector coding etc.

Reference.


A
Arun Sethupat

There are many answers already which explain the differences in detail. I found these gifs on codeacademy and they often help me explain the differences effectively.

Supervised Learning

https://i.stack.imgur.com/cAkuD.gif

Unsupervised Learning

https://i.stack.imgur.com/ADisz.gif


A
Anish Parajuli 웃

Machine learning: It explores the study and construction of algorithms that can learn from and make predictions on data.Such algorithms operate by building a model from example inputs in order to make data-driven predictions or decisions expressed as outputs,rather than following strictly static program instructions.

Supervised learning: It is the machine learning task of inferring a function from labeled training data.The training data consist of a set of training examples. In supervised learning, each example is a pair consisting of an input object (typically a vector) and a desired output value (also called the supervisory signal). A supervised learning algorithm analyzes the training data and produces an inferred function, which can be used for mapping new examples.

The computer is presented with example inputs and their desired outputs, given by a "teacher", and the goal is to learn a general rule that maps inputs to outputs.Specifically, a supervised learning algorithm takes a known set of input data and known responses to the data (output), and trains a model to generate reasonable predictions for the response to new data.

Unsupervised learning: It is learning without a teacher. One basic thing that you might want to do with data is to visualize it. It is the machine learning task of inferring a function to describe hidden structure from unlabeled data. Since the examples given to the learner are unlabeled, there is no error or reward signal to evaluate a potential solution. This distinguishes unsupervised learning from supervised learning. Unsupervised learning uses procedures that attempt to find natural partitions of patterns.

With unsupervised learning there is no feedback based on the prediction results, i.e., there is no teacher to correct you.Under the Unsupervised learning methods no labeled examples are provided and there is no notion of the output during the learning process. As a result, it is up to the learning scheme/model to find patterns or discover the groups of the input data

You should use unsupervised learning methods when you need a large amount of data to train your models, and the willingness and ability to experiment and explore, and of course a challenge that isn’t well solved via more-established methods.With unsupervised learning it is possible to learn larger and more complex models than with supervised learning.Here is a good example on it

.


n
nbro

Supervised Learning: You give variously labelled example data as input, along with the correct answers. This algorithm will learn from it, and start predicting correct results based on the inputs thereafter. Example: Email Spam filter

Unsupervised Learning: You just give data and don't tell anything - like labels or correct answers. Algorithm automatically analyses patterns in the data. Example: Google News


A
Ashish Anand

https://i.stack.imgur.com/DwSzw.png

https://i.stack.imgur.com/LhVoJ.png

The word Supervise means you are giving supervision/instruction to machine to help it find answers. Once it learns instructions, it can easily predict for new case.

Unsupervised means there is no supervision or instruction how to find answers/labels and machine will use its intelligence to find some pattern in our data. Here it will not make prediction, it will just try to find clusters which has similar data.


s
s-hunter

Supervised learning, given the data with an answer.

Given email labeled as spam/not spam, learn a spam filter.

Given a dataset of patients diagnosed as either having diabetes or not, learn to classify new patients as having diabetes or not.

Unsupervised learning, given the data without an answer, let the pc to group things.

Given a set of news articles found on the web, group the into set of articles about the same story.

Given a database of custom data, automatically discover market segments and group customers into different market segments.

Reference


c
coding_ninza

Supervised Learning

In this, every input pattern that is used to train the network is associated with an output pattern, which is the target or the desired pattern. A teacher is assumed to be present during the learning process, when a comparison is made between the network's computed output and the correct expected output, to determine the error. The error can then be used to change network parameters, which result in an improvement in performance.

Unsupervised Learning

In this learning method, the target output is not presented to the network. It is as if there is no teacher to present the desired pattern and hence, the system learns of its own by discovering and adapting to structural features in the input patterns.


P
Pang

I'll try to keep it simple.

Supervised Learning: In this technique of learning, we are given a data set and the system already knows the correct output of the data set. So here, our system learns by predicting a value of its own. Then, it does an accuracy check by using a cost function to check how close its prediction was to the actual output.

Unsupervised Learning: In this approach, we have little or no knowledge of what our result would be. So instead, we derive structure from the data where we don't know effect of variable. We make structure by clustering the data based on relationship among the variable in data. Here, we don't have a feedback based on our prediction.


M
Martin Thoma

Supervised learning

You have input x and a target output t. So you train the algorithm to generalize to the missing parts. It is supervised because the target is given. You are the supervisor telling the algorithm: For the example x, you should output t!

Unsupervised learning

Although segmentation, clustering and compression are usually counted in this direction, I have a hard time to come up with a good definition for it.

Let's take auto-encoders for compression as an example. While you only have the input x given, it is the human engineer how tells the algorithm that the target is also x. So in some sense, this is not different from supervised learning.

And for clustering and segmentation, I'm not too sure if it really fits the definition of machine learning (see other question).


A
Asad Mahmood

Supervised Learning: You have labeled data and have to learn from that. e.g house data along with price and then learn to predict price

Unsupervised learning: you have to find the trend and then predict, no prior labels given. e.g different people in the class and then a new person comes so what group does this new student belong to.


B
Buraira Nasir

In Supervised Learning we know what the input and output should be. For example , given a set of cars. We have to find out which ones red and which ones blue.

Whereas, Unsupervised learning is where we have to find out the answer with a very little or without any idea about how the output should be. For example, a learner might be able to build a model that detects when people are smiling based on correlation of facial patterns and words such as "what are you smiling about?".


s
sam getty

Supervised learning can label a new item into one of the trained labels based on learning during training. You need to provide large numbers of training data set, validation data set and test data set. If you provide say pixel image vectors of digits along with training data with labels, then it can identify the numbers.

Unsupervised learning does not require training data-sets. In unsupervised learning it can group items into different clusters based on the difference in the input vectors. If you provide pixel image vectors of digits and ask it to classify into 10 categories, it may do that. But it does know how to labels it as you have not provided training labels.


T
Tyagi.Am

Supervised Learning is basically where you have input variables(x) and output variable(y) and use algorithm to learn the mapping function from input to the output. The reason why we called this as supervised is because algorithm learns from the training dataset, the algorithm iteratively makes predictions on the training data. Supervised have two types-Classification and Regression. Classification is when the output variable is category like yes/no, true/false. Regression is when the output is real values like height of person, Temperature etc.

UN supervised learning is where we have only input data(X) and no output variables. This is called an unsupervised learning because unlike supervised learning above there is no correct answers and there is no teacher. Algorithms are left to their own devises to discover and present the interesting structure in the data.

Types of unsupervised learning are clustering and Association.


s
sayantan ghosh

Supervised Learning is basically a technique in which the training data from which the machine learns is already labelled that is suppose a simple even odd number classifier where you have already classified the data during training . Therefore it uses "LABELLED" data.

Unsupervised learning on the contrary is a technique in which the machine by itself labels the data . Or you can say its the case when the machine learns by itself from scratch.


p
pankaj yadav E DOT TECH

In Simple Supervised learning is type of machine learning problem in which we have some labels and by using that labels we implement algorithm such as regression and classification .Classification is applied where our output is like in the form of 0 or 1 ,true/false,yes/no. and regression is applied where out put a real value such a house of price

Unsupervised Learning is a type of machine learning problem in which we don't have any labels means we have some data only ,unstructured data and we have to cluster the data (grouping of data)using various unsupervised algorithm


T
Tim Diekmann

Supervised Machine Learning "The process of an algorithm learning from training dataset and predict the output. "

Accuracy of predicted output directly proportional to the training data (length)

Supervised learning is where you have input variables (x) (training dataset) and an output variable (Y) (testing dataset) and you use an algorithm to learn the mapping function from the input to the output.

Y = f(X)

Major types:

Classification (discrete y-axis)

Predictive (continuous y-axis)

Algorithms:

Classification Algorithms: Neural Networks Naïve Bayes classifiers Fisher linear discriminant KNN Decision Tree Super Vector Machines

Predictive Algorithms: Nearest neighbor Linear Regression,Multi Regression

Application areas:

Classifying emails as spam Classifying whether patient has disease or not Voice Recognition Predict the HR select particular candidate or not Predict the stock market price


C
Community

Supervised learning:

A supervised learning algorithm analyzes the training data and produces an inferred function, which can be used for mapping new examples.

We provide training data and we know correct output for a certain input We know relation between input and output

Categories of problem:

Regression: Predict results within a continuous output => map input variables to some continuous function.

Example:

Given a picture of a person, predict his age

Classification: Predict results in a discrete output => map input variables into discrete categories

Example:

Is this tumer cancerous?

https://i.stack.imgur.com/Jv5qj.png

Unsupervised learning:

Unsupervised learning learns from test data that has not been labeled, classified or categorized. Unsupervised learning identifies commonalities in the data and reacts based on the presence or absence of such commonalities in each new piece of data.

We can derive this structure by clustering the data based on relationships among the variables in the data. There is no feedback based on the prediction results.

Categories of problem:

Clustering: is the task of grouping a set of objects in such a way that objects in the same group (called a cluster) are more similar (in some sense) to each other than to those in other groups (clusters)

Example:

Take a collection of 1,000,000 different genes, and find a way to automatically group these genes into groups that are somehow similar or related by different variables, such as lifespan, location, roles, and so on.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/w3JNU.png

Popular use cases are listed here.

Difference between classification and clustering in data mining?

References:

Supervised_learning

Unsupervised_learning

machine-learning from coursera

towardsdatascience


J
Joby Wilson Mathews

Supervised Learning

https://i.stack.imgur.com/yKnVr.png

Unsupervised Learning

https://i.stack.imgur.com/T46bI.png

Example:

Supervised Learning:

One bag with apple

One bag with orange => build model

One mixed bag of apple and orange. => Please classify

Unsupervised Learning:

One mixed bag of apple and orange. => build model

Another mixed bag => Please classify


k
khushal wadake

In simple words.. :) It's my understanding, feel free to correct. Supervised learning is, we know what we are predicting on the basis of provided data. So we have a column in the dataset which needs to be predicated. Unsupervised learning is, we try to extract meaning out of the provided dataset. We don't have clarity on what to be predicted. So question is why we do this?.. :) Answer is - the outcome of Unsupervised learning is groups/clusters(similar data together). So if we receive any new data then we associate that with the identified cluster/group and understand it's features.

I hope it will help you.


A
Amit Agrawal

supervised learning

supervised learning is where we know the output of the raw input, i.e the data is labelled so that during the training of machine learning model it will understand what it need to detect in the give output, and it will guide the system during the training to detect the pre-labelled objects on that basis it will detect the similar objects which we have provided in training.

Here the algorithms will know what's the structure and pattern of data. Supervised learning is used for classification

As an example, we can have a different objects whose shapes are square, circle, trianle our task is to arrange the same types of shapes the labelled dataset have all the shapes labelled, and we will train the machine learning model on that dataset, on the based of training dateset it will start detecting the shapes.

Un-supervised learning

Unsupervised learning is a unguided learning where the end result is not known, it will cluster the dataset and based on similar properties of the object it will divide the objects on different bunches and detect the objects.

Here algorithms will search for the different pattern in the raw data, and based on that it will cluster the data. Un-supervised learning is used for clustering.

As an example, we can have different objects of multiple shapes square, circle, triangle, so it will make the bunches based on the object properties, if a object has four sides it will consider it square, and if it have three sides triangle and if no sides than circle, here the the data is not labelled, it will learn itself to detect the various shapes


S
SUN

Machine learning is a field where you are trying to make machine to mimic the human behavior.

You train machine just like a baby.The way humans learn, identify features, recognize patterns and train himself, same way you train machine by feeding data with various features. Machine algorithm identify the pattern within the data and classify it into particular category.

Machine learning broadly divided into two category, supervised and unsupervised learning.

Supervised learning is the concept where you have input vector / data with corresponding target value (output).On the other hand unsupervised learning is the concept where you only have input vectors / data without any corresponding target value.

An example of supervised learning is handwritten digits recognition where you have image of digits with corresponding digit [0-9], and an example of unsupervised learning is grouping customers by purchasing behavior.