Abstract

Combining multiple classifiers is an effective technique for improving accuracy. There are many general combining algorithms, such as Bagging, Boosting, or Error Correcting Output Coding, that significantly improve classifiers like decision trees, rule learners, or neural networks. Unfortunately, these combining methods do not improve the nearest neighbor classifier. In this paper, we present MFS, a combining algorithm designed to improve the accuracy of the nearest neighbor (NN) classifier. MFS combines multiple NN classifiers each using only a random subset of features. The experimental results are encouraging: On 25 datasets from the UCI repository, MFS significantly outperformed several standard NN variants and was competitive with boosted decision trees. In additional experiments, we show that MFS is robust to irrelevant features, and is able to reduce both bias and variance components of error.

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