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arXiv:1809.10284 [math.FA]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

When is there a Representer Theorem? Reflexive Banach spaces

Kevin Schlegel

Published 2018-09-26Version 1

We consider a general regularised interpolation problem for learning a parameter vector from data. The well known representer theorem says that under certain conditions on the regulariser there exists a solution in the linear span of the data points. This is the core of kernel methods in machine learning as it makes the problem computationally tractable. Most literature deals only with sufficient conditions for representer theorems in Hilbert spaces. We prove necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence of representer theorems in reflexive Banach spaces and illustrate why in a sense reflexivity is the minimal requirement on the function space. We further show that if the learning relies on the linear representer theorem the solution is independent of the regulariser and in fact determined by the function space alone. This in particular shows the value of generalising Hilbert space learning theory to Banach spaces.

Comments: 25 pages, 1 figure. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1709.00084, arXiv:1804.09605
Categories: math.FA, cs.LG, stat.ML
Subjects: 68T05, G.1.1, G.1.2, G.1.6, I.2.6
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