From f1e5741d03d181d7417dcf06e40d81d5e0fd5434 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Yuchen Pei Date: Thu, 3 Jan 2019 09:14:14 +0100 Subject: corrected some attributions --- posts/2018-12-02-lime-shapley.md | 10 ++++++---- 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/posts/2018-12-02-lime-shapley.md b/posts/2018-12-02-lime-shapley.md index a73d32e..c78a1e3 100644 --- a/posts/2018-12-02-lime-shapley.md +++ b/posts/2018-12-02-lime-shapley.md @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ comments: true --- In this post I explain LIME (Ribeiro et. al. 2016), the Shapley values -(Shapley, 1953) and the SHAP values (Lundberg-Lee, 2017). +(Shapley, 1953) and the SHAP values (Strumbelj-Kononenko, 2014; Lundberg-Lee, 2017). __Acknowledgement__. Thanks to Josef Lindman Hörnlund for bringing the LIME and SHAP papers to my attention. The research was done while working at KTH @@ -247,9 +247,11 @@ Plugging this back into (6) we get the desired result. $\square$ SHAP ---- -The SHAP paper (Lundberg-Lee 2017) is not clear in its definition of the -\"SHAP values\" and its relation to LIME, so the following is my -interpretation of their interpretation model. +The paper that coined the term \"SHAP values\" (Lundberg-Lee 2017) +is not clear in its definition of the \"SHAP values\" and its +relation to LIME, so the following is my +interpretation of their interpretation model, which coincide with a +model studied in Strumbelj-Kononenko 2014. Recall that we want to calculate feature contributions to a model $f$ at a sample $x$. -- cgit v1.2.3