Machine Learning at Microsoft with ML .NET

Machine Learning is transitioning from an art and science into a technology available to every developer. In the near future, every application on every platform will incorporate trained models to encode data-based decisions that would be impossible for developers to author. This presents a signific...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2019-05
Hauptverfasser: Ahmed, Zeeshan, Amizadeh, Saeed, Bilenko, Mikhail, Carr, Rogan, Wei-Sheng, Chin, Dekel, Yael, Dupre, Xavier, Eksarevskiy, Vadim, Erhardt, Eric, Costin Eseanu, Filipi, Senja, Finley, Tom, Goswami, Abhishek, Hoover, Monte, Inglis, Scott, Interlandi, Matteo, Katzenberger, Shon, Kazmi, Najeeb, Krivosheev, Gleb, Luferenko, Pete, Matantsev, Ivan, Matusevych, Sergiy, Moradi, Shahab, Gani Nazirov, Ormont, Justin, Gal Oshri, Pagnoni, Artidoro, Parmar, Jignesh, Roy, Prabhat, Shah, Sarthak, Siddiqui, Mohammad Zeeshan, Weimer, Markus, Zahirazami, Shauheen, Zhu, Yiwen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Machine Learning is transitioning from an art and science into a technology available to every developer. In the near future, every application on every platform will incorporate trained models to encode data-based decisions that would be impossible for developers to author. This presents a significant engineering challenge, since currently data science and modeling are largely decoupled from standard software development processes. This separation makes incorporating machine learning capabilities inside applications unnecessarily costly and difficult, and furthermore discourage developers from embracing ML in first place. In this paper we present ML .NET, a framework developed at Microsoft over the last decade in response to the challenge of making it easy to ship machine learning models in large software applications. We present its architecture, and illuminate the application demands that shaped it. Specifically, we introduce DataView, the core data abstraction of ML .NET which allows it to capture full predictive pipelines efficiently and consistently across training and inference lifecycles. We close the paper with a surprisingly favorable performance study of ML .NET compared to more recent entrants, and a discussion of some lessons learned.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1905.05715