OpenCV  3.4.20-dev
Open Source Computer Vision
Introduction to Support Vector Machines

Next Tutorial: Support Vector Machines for Non-Linearly Separable Data

Goal

In this tutorial you will learn how to:

What is a SVM?

A Support Vector Machine (SVM) is a discriminative classifier formally defined by a separating hyperplane. In other words, given labeled training data (supervised learning), the algorithm outputs an optimal hyperplane which categorizes new examples.

In which sense is the hyperplane obtained optimal? Let's consider the following simple problem:

For a linearly separable set of 2D-points which belong to one of two classes, find a separating straight line.

separating-lines.png
Note
In this example we deal with lines and points in the Cartesian plane instead of hyperplanes and vectors in a high dimensional space. This is a simplification of the problem.It is important to understand that this is done only because our intuition is better built from examples that are easy to imagine. However, the same concepts apply to tasks where the examples to classify lie in a space whose dimension is higher than two.

In the above picture you can see that there exists multiple lines that offer a solution to the problem. Is any of them better than the others? We can intuitively define a criterion to estimate the worth of the lines: A line is bad if it passes too close to the points because it will be noise sensitive and it will not generalize correctly. Therefore, our goal should be to find the line passing as far as possible from all points.

Then, the operation of the SVM algorithm is based on finding the hyperplane that gives the largest minimum distance to the training examples. Twice, this distance receives the important name of margin within SVM's theory. Therefore, the optimal separating hyperplane maximizes the margin of the training data.

optimal-hyperplane.png

How is the optimal hyperplane computed?

Let's introduce the notation used to define formally a hyperplane:

\[f(x) = \beta_{0} + \beta^{T} x,\]

where \(\beta\) is known as the weight vector and \(\beta_{0}\) as the bias.

Note
A more in depth description of this and hyperplanes you can find in the section 4.5 (Separating Hyperplanes) of the book: Elements of Statistical Learning by T. Hastie, R. Tibshirani and J. H. Friedman ([215]).

The optimal hyperplane can be represented in an infinite number of different ways by scaling of \(\beta\) and \(\beta_{0}\). As a matter of convention, among all the possible representations of the hyperplane, the one chosen is

\[|\beta_{0} + \beta^{T} x| = 1\]

where \(x\) symbolizes the training examples closest to the hyperplane. In general, the training examples that are closest to the hyperplane are called support vectors. This representation is known as the canonical hyperplane.

Now, we use the result of geometry that gives the distance between a point \(x\) and a hyperplane \((\beta, \beta_{0})\):

\[\mathrm{distance} = \frac{|\beta_{0} + \beta^{T} x|}{||\beta||}.\]

In particular, for the canonical hyperplane, the numerator is equal to one and the distance to the support vectors is

\[\mathrm{distance}_{\text{ support vectors}} = \frac{|\beta_{0} + \beta^{T} x|}{||\beta||} = \frac{1}{||\beta||}.\]

Recall that the margin introduced in the previous section, here denoted as \(M\), is twice the distance to the closest examples:

\[M = \frac{2}{||\beta||}\]

Finally, the problem of maximizing \(M\) is equivalent to the problem of minimizing a function \(L(\beta)\) subject to some constraints. The constraints model the requirement for the hyperplane to classify correctly all the training examples \(x_{i}\). Formally,

\[\min_{\beta, \beta_{0}} L(\beta) = \frac{1}{2}||\beta||^{2} \text{ subject to } y_{i}(\beta^{T} x_{i} + \beta_{0}) \geq 1 \text{ } \forall i,\]

where \(y_{i}\) represents each of the labels of the training examples.

This is a problem of Lagrangian optimization that can be solved using Lagrange multipliers to obtain the weight vector \(\beta\) and the bias \(\beta_{0}\) of the optimal hyperplane.

Source Code

Explanation

The training data of this exercise is formed by a set of labeled 2D-points that belong to one of two different classes; one of the classes consists of one point and the other of three points.

The function cv::ml::SVM::train that will be used afterwards requires the training data to be stored as cv::Mat objects of floats. Therefore, we create these objects from the arrays defined above:

Here:

Results

svm_intro_result.png