Abstract

We investigate the problem of learning Boolean functions with a short DNF representation using decision trees as a concept description language. Unfortunately, Boolean concepts with a short description may not have a small decision tree representation when the tests at the nodes are limited to the primitive attributes. This representational shortcoming may be overcome by using Boolean features at the decision nodes. We present two new methods that adaptively introduce relevant features while learning a decision tree from examples. We show empirically that these methods outperform a standard decision tree algorithm for learning small random DNF functions when the examples are drawn at random from the uniform distribution.

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