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College of Engineering/Engineering Practice School (공과대학/대학원)
Dept. of Industrial Engineering (산업공학과)
Journal Papers (저널논문_산업공학과)
Semi-supervised support vector regression based on self-training with label uncertainty: An application to virtual metrology in semiconductor manufacturing
- Issue Date
- 2016-06
- Publisher
- PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
- Citation
- Expert Systems with Applications, Vol.51 No.1,pp.85-106
- Keywords
- Semi-supervised support vector regression based on self-training with label uncertainty: An application to virtual metrology in semiconductor manufacturing ; 자연과학 ; Semi-supervised learning ; Support vector regression ; Probabilistic local reconstruction ; Data generation ; Virtual metrology ; Semiconductor manufacturing
- Abstract
- Dataset size continues to increase and data are being collected from numerous applications. Because collecting labeled data is expensive and time consuming, the amount of unlabeled data is increasing. Semi-supervised learning (SSL) has been proposed to improve conventional supervised learning methods by training from both unlabeled and labeled data. In contrast to classification problems, the estimation of labels for unlabeled data presents added uncertainty for regression problems. In this paper, a semi supervised support vector regression (SS-SVR) method based on self-training is proposed. The proposed method addresses the uncertainty of the estimated labels for unlabeled data. To measure labeling uncertainty, the label distribution of the unlabeled data is estimated with two probabilistic local reconstruction (PLR) models. Then, the training data are generated by oversampling from the unlabeled data and their estimated label distribution. The sampling rate is different based on uncertainty. Finally, expected margin-based pattern selection (EMPS) is employed to reduce training complexity. We verify the proposed method with 30 regression datasets and a real-world problem: virtual metrology (VM) in semiconductor manufacturing. The experiment results show that the proposed method improves the accuracy by 8% compared with conventional supervised SVR, and the training time for the proposed method is 20% shorter than that of the benchmark methods. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- ISSN
- 0957-4174
- Language
- English
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