Ordinal Regression via Binary Preference vs Simple Regression: Statistical and Experimental Perspectives
Ordinal regression with anchored reference samples (ORARS) has been proposed for predicting the subjective Mean Opinion Score (MOS) of input stimuli automatically. The ORARS addresses the MOS prediction problem by pairing a test sample with each of the pre-scored anchored reference samples. A traine...
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Zusammenfassung: | Ordinal regression with anchored reference samples (ORARS) has been proposed
for predicting the subjective Mean Opinion Score (MOS) of input stimuli
automatically. The ORARS addresses the MOS prediction problem by pairing a test
sample with each of the pre-scored anchored reference samples. A trained binary
classifier is then used to predict which sample, test or anchor, is better
statistically. Posteriors of the binary preference decision are then used to
predict the MOS of the test sample. In this paper, rigorous framework,
analysis, and experiments to demonstrate that ORARS are advantageous over
simple regressions are presented. The contributions of this work are: 1) Show
that traditional regression can be reformulated into multiple preference tests
to yield a better performance, which is confirmed with simulations
experimentally; 2) Generalize ORARS to other regression problems and verify its
effectiveness; 3) Provide some prerequisite conditions which can insure proper
application of ORARS. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2207.02454 |