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I kind of understand what "overfitting" means, but I need help as to how to come up with a real-world example that applies to overfitting.

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    $\begingroup$ Perhaps you could explain what you 'kind of understand' about 'what overfitting means', so that people can address the parts you don't understand without having to guess what these might be? $\endgroup$
    – goangit
    Dec 11, 2014 at 9:45
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    $\begingroup$ @ssdecontrol Spurious correlation is not overfitting. In fact, spurious correlation need not involve an explicit model, and the implicit model is usually a straight line with two parameters. $\endgroup$
    – Nick Cox
    Dec 11, 2014 at 18:18
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    $\begingroup$ @whuber: This would perhaps be more appropriate to discuss on meta, but I was surprised to see that you converted this post to community wiki. Doesn't it mean that the OP will not get reputation increase for future upvotes? To me it looks almost like a "punishment" for him; what was the reason for that? $\endgroup$
    – amoeba
    Dec 11, 2014 at 20:38
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    $\begingroup$ @amoeba It's not punishment: this question as stated obviously has no one correct or canonical answer. In its original form as a non-CW question it was off-topic as a result--and should have rapidly been closed, BTW--but because there may be value in having some good examples created collectively by the community, conferring CW status instead of closing it seems to be a reasonable solution. $\endgroup$
    – whuber
    Dec 11, 2014 at 20:49
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    $\begingroup$ So far very few of these answers (only two out of 11!) even attempt to address the question, which asks for a real-world example. That means not a simulation, not a theoretical example, not a cartoon, but a seriously applied model to actual data. Note, too, that the question explicitly tries to steer answers away from explanations of what overfitting is. $\endgroup$
    – whuber
    Dec 11, 2014 at 22:06

21 Answers 21

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Here's a nice example of presidential election time series models from xkcd: enter image description here

There have only been 56 presidential elections and 43 presidents. That is not a lot of data to learn from. When the predictor space expands to include things like having false teeth and the Scrabble point value of names, it's pretty easy for the model to go from fitting the generalizable features of the data (the signal) and to start matching the noise. When this happens, the fit on the historical data may improve, but the model will fail miserably when used to make inferences about future presidential elections.

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    $\begingroup$ I think you should add something about sample bias to explain how this relates to overfitting. Just a cut&paste of the cartoon is missing the explanation. $\endgroup$ Dec 11, 2014 at 8:40
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    $\begingroup$ A nice feature of this example is that it demonstrates the difference between overfitting and complexity. The rule "As goes California, so goes the nation" is simple, yet still overfit. $\endgroup$
    – Tom Minka
    Dec 12, 2014 at 20:42
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    $\begingroup$ @TomMinka in fact overfitting can be caused by complexity (a model too complex to fit a too simple data, thus additional parameters will fit whatever comes at hand) or, as you pointed, by noisy features that gets more weights in the decision than pertinent features. And there are a lot of other possible sources of overfitting (intrinsic variance of the data or model, data not pertinent to represent the target goal, etc.). I think we ought to say that there are overfittings, not just overfitting (which imply that there's just one cause, which often is not correct). $\endgroup$
    – gaborous
    Dec 12, 2014 at 22:09
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My favorite was the Matlab example of US census population versus time:

  • A linear model is pretty good
  • A quadratic model is closer
  • A quartic model predicts total annihilation starting next year

(At least I sincerely hope this is an example of overfitting)

http://www.mathworks.com/help/curvefit/examples/polynomial-curve-fitting.html#zmw57dd0e115enter image description here

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    $\begingroup$ Just to be clear exactly underneath the plot they do say : "The behavior of the sixth-degree polynomial fit beyond the data range makes it a poor choice for extrapolation and you can reject this fit." $\endgroup$
    – usεr11852
    Apr 24, 2015 at 5:59
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    $\begingroup$ I’ve just stumbled across this during Covid. Yikes. $\endgroup$
    – Dave
    Aug 6, 2020 at 2:11
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The study of Chen et al. (2013) fits two cubics to a supposed discontinuity in life expectancy as a function of latitude.

Chen Y., Ebenstein, A., Greenstone, M., and Li, H. 2013. Evidence on the impact of sustained exposure to air pollution on life expectancy from China's Huai River policy. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 110: 12936–12941. abstract

Despite its publication in an outstanding journal, etc., its tacit endorsement by distinguished people, etc., I would still present this as a prima facie example of over-fitting.

A tell-tale sign is the implausibility of cubics. Fitting a cubic implicitly assumes there is some reason why life expectancy would vary as a third-degree polynomial of the latitude where you live. That seems rather implausible: it is not easy to imagine a plausible physical mechanism that would cause such an effect.

See also the following blog post for a more detailed analysis of this paper: Evidence on the impact of sustained use of polynomial regression on causal inference (a claim that coal heating is reducing lifespan by 5 years for half a billion people).

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    $\begingroup$ +1 Andrew Gelman even wrote one or two blog posts about why it's implausible. Here's one: andrewgelman.com/2013/08/05/… $\endgroup$
    – Sycorax
    Dec 11, 2014 at 16:22
  • $\begingroup$ @user777 The Gelman blog is probably how I first heard of this. But I thought it most appropriate to give the reference, add the fluff of my personal comment, and let people judge for themselves. $\endgroup$
    – Nick Cox
    Dec 11, 2014 at 16:25
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    $\begingroup$ I've cut an edit by @D.W. that introduced comments on life expectancy in different countries, which isn't what the paper is about at all. $\endgroup$
    – Nick Cox
    Dec 12, 2014 at 8:59
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    $\begingroup$ Another example I think is illustrative (although potentially more contrived than "real-world") are prediction competitions that feed-back intermediate results - like kaggle. Typically there are individuals who optimize results to the leaderboard, but they aren't the winners for the hold out sample. Rob Hyndman has some discussion of this. That takes a bit more in-depth perspective though than I think the OP wants here. $\endgroup$
    – Andy W
    Dec 12, 2014 at 14:24
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    $\begingroup$ I was just about to post the Gelman & Imbens paper that came out of this: nber.org/papers/w20405 (gated, unfortunately) $\endgroup$ Dec 12, 2014 at 19:51
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In a March 14, 2014 article in Science, David Lazer, Ryan Kennedy, Gary King, and Alessandro Vespignani identified problems in Google Flu Trends that they attribute to overfitting.

Figure

Here is how they tell the story, including their explanation of the nature of the overfitting and why it caused the algorithm to fail:

In February 2013, ... Nature reported that GFT was predicting more than double the proportion of doctor visits for influenza-like illness (ILI) than the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) ... . This happened despite the fact that GFT was built to predict CDC reports. ...

Essentially, the methodology was to find the best matches among 50 million search terms to fit 1152 data points. The odds of finding search terms that match the propensity of the flu but are structurally unrelated, and so do not predict the future, were quite high. GFT developers, in fact, report weeding out seasonal search terms unrelated to the flu but strongly correlated to the CDC data, such as those regarding high school basketball. This should have been a warning that the big data were overfitting the small number of cases—a standard concern in data analysis. This ad hoc method of throwing out peculiar search terms failed when GFT completely missed the nonseasonal 2009 influenza A–H1N1 pandemic.

[Emphasis added.]

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    $\begingroup$ Unfortunately this example has some problems. The paper suggests two rather different reasons why GFT was making bad predictions: overfitting and changes to the search engine. The authors admit that they are not in a position to determine which reason (if any) is correct, so it is essentially speculation. Furthermore, the paragraph about overfitting refers to the original version of the system, while the predictions in the graph were made with a modified system. $\endgroup$
    – Tom Minka
    Dec 12, 2014 at 19:36
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    $\begingroup$ @Tom The article is not written as if the allegation of overfitting is speculation: the authors flatly assert that. I think it's a reasonable statement. They also address the reason why they have to be somewhat speculative: Google was not open or transparent about the algorithm. It seems to me immaterial for the present purpose whether the overfitting occurred only in one version or many, but as I recall the authors address this too and point out evidence of continued overfitting in the current algorithm. $\endgroup$
    – whuber
    Dec 12, 2014 at 19:46
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    $\begingroup$ The article only says that overfitting is a standard concern in data analysis. It does not claim that overfitting was the reason. Reference (2) goes into more detail, but again says that overfitting is only a "possible issue", with the statement "Because the search algorithm and resulting query terms that were used to define the original and updated GFT models remain undisclosed, it is difficult to identify the reasons for the suboptimal performance of the system and make recommendations for improvement." $\endgroup$
    – Tom Minka
    Dec 12, 2014 at 19:57
  • $\begingroup$ @Tom I will stand by the quotation given here, which is an accurate one, as adequate support for why the Google Flu model is worthy of consideration in the present context. $\endgroup$
    – whuber
    Dec 12, 2014 at 20:30
  • $\begingroup$ Interesting discussion. I'll add just that the graph might support the argument better if the lines were labeled. $\endgroup$
    – rolando2
    Dec 12, 2014 at 21:27
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I saw this image a few weeks ago and thought it was rather relevant to the question at hand.

meme picture

Instead of linearly fitting the sequence, it was fitted with a quartic polynomial, which had perfect fit, but resulted in a clearly ridiculous answer.

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    $\begingroup$ This does not answer the question as asked, and might be better as a comment or not being posted at all. This does not provide a real-world example of overfitting (which is what the question asked for). It also does not explain how the example image is relevant to overfitting. Finally, it is very short. We prefer thorough, detailed answers that answer the question that was asked -- not just discussion related to the question. $\endgroup$
    – D.W.
    Dec 12, 2014 at 0:51
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    $\begingroup$ In fact this is exactly a case of overfitting due to too-complex model, as you can construct an infinity of higher-order (non-linear) functions in order to generate an infinite number of different last terms of the sequence while still fitting the other (known) terms, by using a Lagrange interpolation as explained here. $\endgroup$
    – gaborous
    Dec 12, 2014 at 22:24
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    $\begingroup$ @user1121352 In the cartoon, the high-order polynomial is the true model, so it's not about over-fitting at all. An answer such as "9" (the next odd number) or "11" (the next odd prime) would actually be under-fitting because it uses a too-simple model to predict the next value. The cartoon actually illustrates the opposite case, that a more complex model could be true. $\endgroup$
    – Sycorax
    Dec 13, 2014 at 13:34
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    $\begingroup$ The quartic polynomial (as interpreted by me) is intended to be a ridiculous solution, since the obvious answer that anyone will give before seeing the ridiculous solution would be 9 (or any other OEIS value). I assumed the "doge" format conveyed the sarcasm, but we clearly see Poe's Law at work here. $\endgroup$
    – March Ho
    Dec 13, 2014 at 14:01
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    $\begingroup$ This is exactly the point I'm trying to make, though, which is that we don't know what the true function is. If you're conducting original analysis, you don't have a resource like the OEIS to appeal to for truth: that's what your model is attempting to establish. I appreciate that the cartoon is attempting sarcasm, but the cartoon's placement within this particular discussion exposes an important subtlety to the question about overfitting and statistical modelling generally. The intent of its original creator is irrelevant because you've recontextualized it here! $\endgroup$
    – Sycorax
    Dec 13, 2014 at 15:19
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To me the best example is Ptolemaic system in astronomy. Ptolemy assumed that Earth is at the center of the universe, and created a sophisticated system of nested circular orbits, which would explain movements of object on the sky pretty well. Astronomers had to keep adding circles to explain deviation, until one day it got so convoluted that folks started doubting it. That's when Copernicus came up with a more realistic model.

This is the best example of overfitting to me. You can't overfit data generating process (DGP) to the data. You can only overfit misspecified model. Almost all our models in social sciences are misspecified, so the key is to remember this, and keep them parsimonious. Not to try to catch every aspect of the data set, but try to capture the essential features through simplification.

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    $\begingroup$ This does not appear to be an example of overfitting. There's nothing wrong with the Ptolemaic system as a predictive model: it is complicated only because the coordinate system is geocentric rather than originating with the galactic center of mass. The problem, therefore, is that an accurate, legitimate fit was made with an overly complicated model. (Ellipses are much simpler than epicycles.) It's a true challenge to find parsimonious nonlinear models! $\endgroup$
    – whuber
    Dec 11, 2014 at 18:03
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    $\begingroup$ You'll end up with a lot of circles to model Jupiter's moons' orbits in Ptolemaic system. $\endgroup$
    – Aksakal
    Dec 11, 2014 at 18:06
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    $\begingroup$ That's right--but on the face of it, that's not necessarily overfitting. The acid test lies in the predictions of future values, which in that system worked well enough to stand for 1400 years. Data are overfit not when the model is very complicated, but when it is so flexible that by capturing extraneous detail it produces much more inaccurate predictions than would be expected from an analysis of the model's residuals on its training data. $\endgroup$
    – whuber
    Dec 11, 2014 at 18:34
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    $\begingroup$ Aksakal: You certainly can. Consider @arnaud's example, & suppose the data-generating process were known to be $\operatorname{E}Y=\sum_{k=0}^9 \beta_k x^i$. Would learning that lead you to fit that model to those ten data points in the expectation of better predictions on new data than the simple linear model? $\endgroup$ Dec 12, 2014 at 14:46
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    $\begingroup$ @Aksakal: 10 parameters: $\operatorname{E}Y=\sum_{k=0}^9 \beta_k x^k$ (typed correctly now!). Of course the error can't be estimated, or assume it known. If it's bothering you, consider an eighth-order polynomial in $x$; the point's the same. $\endgroup$ Dec 12, 2014 at 15:15
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Let's say you have 100 dots on a graph.

You could say: hmm, I want to predict the next one.

  • with a line
  • with a 2nd order polynomial
  • with a 3rd order polynomial
  • ...
  • with a 100th order polynomial

Here you can see a simplified illustration for this example: enter image description here

The higher the polynomial order, the better it will fit the existing dots.

However, the high order polynomials, despite looking like to be better models for the dots, are actually overfitting them. It models the noise rather than the true data distribution.

As a consequence, if you add a new dot to the graph with your perfectly fitting curve, it'll probably be further away from the curve than if you used a simpler low order polynomial.

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  • $\begingroup$ "As a consequence, if you add a new dot to the graph with your perfectly fitting curve, it'll probably be further away from the curve than if you used a simpler low order polynomial" - moreover, this is still true even if the data-generating process for the new dot (ie the relationship in the population) was actually a high power polynomial like the one you (over)fitted. $\endgroup$
    – Silverfish
    Dec 14, 2014 at 8:42
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    $\begingroup$ The pictures here are actually incorrect - for example, the 9-degree polynomial has only been plotted as a piecewise linear function, but I suspect in reality it should swing wildly up & down in the ranges between the points. You should see this effect in the 5-degree polynomial too. $\endgroup$ Dec 16, 2014 at 16:46
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The analysis that may have contributed to the Fukushima disaster is an example of overfitting. There is a well known relationship in Earth Science that describes the probability of earthquakes of a certain size, given the observed frequency of "lesser" earthquakes. This is known as the Gutenberg-Richter relationship, and it provides a straight-line log fit over many decades. Analysis of the earthquake risk in the vicinity of the reactor (this diagram from Nate Silver's excellent book "The Signal and the Noise") show a "kink" in the data. Ignoring the kink leads to an estimate of the annualized risk of a magnitude 9 earthquake as about 1 in 300 - definitely something to prepare for. However, overfitting a dual slope line (as was apparently done during the initial risk assessment for the reactors) reduces the risk prediction to about 1 in 13,000 years. One could not fault the engineers for not designing the reactors to withstand such an unlikely event - but one should definitely fault the statisticians who overfitted (and then extrapolated) the data...

enter image description here

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  • $\begingroup$ Is it conclusive the dual slope model was overfit? The kink is prominent; I'd guess if each line segment was estimated from, say, 3 points each, you'd get better predictions on the hold-out than by estimating a single line. (Of course the subsequent observation of a "1 in 13,000 yr" event argues against it! But that's hard to interpret as we wouldn't be re-examining this model if that hadn't happened.) If there were physical reasons to ignore the perceived kink then the case this was overfit is stronger - I don't know how well such data usually matches the ideal Gutenberg-Richter relationship. $\endgroup$
    – Silverfish
    Dec 16, 2014 at 2:16
  • $\begingroup$ This does very graphically illustrate the perils of extrapolation, and the need for a loss function that takes into account the severity of consequences of an error... $\endgroup$
    – Silverfish
    Dec 16, 2014 at 2:20
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    $\begingroup$ The problem really is that very little data is used for some of the last points - so they have a great deal of uncertainty in them. Looking closely at the data, you can see there was a single 7.9 event, then several 7.7s. Little is known about quakes greater than 8.0 as they are infrequent - but when you observe a 9.0 quake (the Tohoku quake that caused the Tsunami) you can draw your own conclusion. The straight line may be conservative - but when it comes to nuclear safety, conservative is good. $\endgroup$
    – Floris
    Dec 16, 2014 at 3:13
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    $\begingroup$ @Floris Good point. It would have been better if they had used a box-plot that showed not only the observed frequencies but also confidence intervals for those frequencies. Then one would probably get very narrow boxes to the left in the diagram and very wide boxes to the right. (Such confidence intervals can be calculated assuming that each frequency follows a Poisson distribution.) $\endgroup$
    – user763305
    Dec 17, 2014 at 13:01
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    $\begingroup$ @user763305 - yes, I'm pretty sure that adding confidence intervals would show that a straight line is not inconsistent with the data (or in other words, that you can't reject the null hypothesis that the data follow a straight line). $\endgroup$
    – Floris
    Dec 17, 2014 at 14:13
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"Agh! Pat is leaving the company. How are we ever going to find a replacement?"

Job Posting:

Wanted: Electrical Engineer. 42 year old androgynous person with degrees in Electrical Engineering, mathematics, and animal husbandry. Must be 68 inches tall with brown hair, a mole over the left eye, and prone to long winded diatribes against geese and misuse of the word 'counsel'.

In a mathematical sense, overfitting often refers to making a model with more parameters than are necessary, resulting in a better fit for a specific data set, but without capturing relevant details necessary to fit other data sets from the class of interest.

In the above example, the poster is unable to differentiate the relevant from irrelevant characteristics. The resulting qualifications are likely only met by the one person that they already know is right for the job (but no longer wants it).

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    $\begingroup$ While entertaining, this answer does not provide insight into what overfitting means in a statistical sense. Perhaps you could expand your answer to clarify the relationship between these very particular attributes and statistical modeling. $\endgroup$
    – Sycorax
    Dec 11, 2014 at 14:52
  • $\begingroup$ +1 Mark. I agree with @user777 only to a small extent. Maybe a sentence will bring the concise example home. But adding too much will take away from the simplicity. $\endgroup$
    – ndoogan
    Dec 11, 2014 at 14:58
  • $\begingroup$ I think this is a great answer - it exhibits the very common type of overfitting that essentially memorizes the training data, especially the common case when the amount of training data is insufficient to saturate the expressive power of the model. $\endgroup$ Dec 16, 2014 at 16:49
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This one is made-up, but I hope it will illustrate the case.

Example 1

First, let's make up some random data. Here you have $k=100$ variables, each drawn from a standard normal distribution, with $n=100$ cases:

set.seed(123)
k <- 100
data <- replicate(k, rnorm(100))
colnames(data) <- make.names(1:k)
data <- as.data.frame(data)

Now, let's fit a linear regression to it:

fit <- lm(X1 ~ ., data=data)

And here is a summary for first ten predictors:

> summary(fit)

Call:
lm(formula = X1 ~ ., data = data)

Residuals:
ALL 100 residuals are 0: no residual degrees of freedom!

Coefficients:
              Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|)
(Intercept) -1.502e-01         NA      NA       NA
X2           3.153e-02         NA      NA       NA
X3          -6.200e-01         NA      NA       NA
X4           7.087e-01         NA      NA       NA
X5           4.392e-01         NA      NA       NA
X6           2.979e-01         NA      NA       NA
X7          -9.092e-02         NA      NA       NA
X8          -5.783e-01         NA      NA       NA
X9           5.965e-01         NA      NA       NA
X10         -8.289e-01         NA      NA       NA
...
Residual standard error: NaN on 0 degrees of freedom
Multiple R-squared:      1, Adjusted R-squared:    NaN 
F-statistic:   NaN on 99 and 0 DF,  p-value: NA

results look pretty weird, but let's plot it.

enter image description here

That is great, fitted values perfectly fit the $X_1$ values. Error variance is literally zero. But, let it not convince us, let's check what is the sum of absolute differences between $X_1$ and fitted values:

> sum(abs(data$X1-fitted(fit)))
[1] 0

It is zero, so the plots were not lying to us: the model fits perfectly. And how precise is it in classification?

> sum(data$X1==fitted(fit))
[1] 100

We get 100 out of 100 fitted values that are identical to $X_1$. And we got this with totally random numbers fitted to other totally random numbers.

Example 2

One more example. Lets make up some more data:

data2 <- cbind(1:10, diag(10))
colnames(data2) <- make.names(1:11)
data2 <- as.data.frame(data2)

so it looks like this:

   X1 X2 X3 X4 X5 X6 X7 X8 X9 X10 X11
1   1  1  0  0  0  0  0  0  0   0   0
2   2  0  1  0  0  0  0  0  0   0   0
3   3  0  0  1  0  0  0  0  0   0   0
4   4  0  0  0  1  0  0  0  0   0   0
5   5  0  0  0  0  1  0  0  0   0   0
6   6  0  0  0  0  0  1  0  0   0   0
7   7  0  0  0  0  0  0  1  0   0   0
8   8  0  0  0  0  0  0  0  1   0   0
9   9  0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0   1   0
10 10  0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0   0   1

and now lets fit a linear regression to this:

fit2 <- lm(X1~., data2)

so we get following estimates:

> summary(fit2)

Call:
lm(formula = X1 ~ ., data = data2)

Residuals:
ALL 10 residuals are 0: no residual degrees of freedom!

Coefficients: (1 not defined because of singularities)
            Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|)
(Intercept)       10         NA      NA       NA
X2                -9         NA      NA       NA
X3                -8         NA      NA       NA
X4                -7         NA      NA       NA
X5                -6         NA      NA       NA
X6                -5         NA      NA       NA
X7                -4         NA      NA       NA
X8                -3         NA      NA       NA
X9                -2         NA      NA       NA
X10               -1         NA      NA       NA
X11               NA         NA      NA       NA

Residual standard error: NaN on 0 degrees of freedom
Multiple R-squared:      1, Adjusted R-squared:    NaN 
F-statistic:   NaN on 9 and 0 DF,  p-value: NA

as you can see, we have $R^2 = 1$, i.e. "100% variance explained". Linear regression didn't even need to use 10th predictor. From this regression we see, that $X_1$ can be predicted using function:

$$X_1 = 10 + X_2 \times -9 + X_3 \times -8 + X_4 \times -7 + X_5 \times -6 + X_6 \times -5 + X_7 \times -4 + X_8 \times -3 + X_9 \times -2$$

so $X_1 = 1$ is:

$$10 + 1 \times -9 + 0 \times -8 + 0 \times -7 + 0 \times -6 + 0 \times -5 + 0 \times -4 + 0 \times -3 + 0 \times -2$$

It is pretty self-explanatory. You can think of Example 1 as similar to Example 2 but with some "noise" added. If you have big enough data and use it for "predicting" something then sometimes a single "feature" may convince you that you have a "pattern" that describes your dependent variable well, while it could be just a coincidence. In Example 2 nothing is really predicted, but exactly the same has happened in Example 1 just the values of the variables were different.

Real life examples

The real life example for this is predicting terrorist attacks on 11 September 2001 by watching "patterns" in numbers randomly drawn by computer pseudorandom number generators by Global Consciousness Project or "secret messages" in "Moby Dick" that reveal facts about assassinations of famous people (inspired by similar findings in Bible).

Conclusion

If you look hard enough, you'll find "patterns" for anything. However, those patterns won't let you learn anything about the universe and won't help you reach any general conclusions. They will fit perfectly to your data, but would be useless since they won't fit anything else then the data itself. They won't let you make any reasonable out-of-sample predictions, because what they would do, is they would rather imitate than describe the data.

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    $\begingroup$ I'd suggest putting the real-life examples at the top of this answer. That's the part that's actually relevant to the question -- the rest is gravy. $\endgroup$ Dec 12, 2014 at 19:54
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A common problem that results in overfitting in real life is that in addition to terms for a correctly specified model, we may have have added something extraneous: irrelevant powers (or other transformations) of the correct terms, irrelevant variables, or irrelevant interactions.

This happens in multiple regression if you add a variable that should not appear in the correctly specified model but do not want to drop it because you are afraid of inducing omitted variable bias. Of course, you have no way of knowing you have wrongly included it, since you can't see the whole population, only your sample, so can't know for sure what the correct specification is. (As @Scortchi points out in the comments, there may be no such thing as a the "correct" model specification - in that sense, the aim of modelling is finding a "good enough" specification; to avoid overfitting involves avoiding a model complexity greater than can be sustained from the available data.) If you want a real-world example of overfitting, this happens every time you throw all the potential predictors into a regression model, should any of them in fact have no relationship with the response once the effects of others are partialled out.

With this type of overfitting, the good news is that inclusion of these irrelevant terms does not introduce bias of your estimators, and in very large samples the coefficients of the irrelevant terms should be close to zero. But there is also bad news: because the limited information from your sample is now being used to estimate more parameters, it can only do so with less precision - so the standard errors on the genuinely relevant terms increase. That also means they're likely to be further from the true values than estimates from a correctly specified regression, which in turn means that if given new values of your explanatory variables, the predictions from the overfitted model will tend to be less accurate than for the correctly specified model.

Here is a plot of log GDP against log population for 50 US states in 2010. A random sample of 10 states was selected (highlighted in red) and for that sample we fit a simple linear model and a polynomial of degree 5. For the sample points, the polynomial has extra degrees of freedom that let it "wriggle" closer to the observed data than the straight line can. But the 50 states as a whole obey a nearly linear relationship, so the predictive performance of the polynomial model on the 40 out-of-sample points is very poor compared to the less complex model, particularly when extrapolating. The polynomial was effectively fitting some of the random structure (noise) of the sample, which did not generalise to the wider population. It was particularly poor at extrapolating beyond the observed range of the sample. (Code plus data for this plot is at the bottom of this revision of this answer.)

Extrapolation from overly complex model

Similar issues affect regression against multiple predictors. To look at some actual data, it's easier with simulation rather than real-world samples since this way you control the data-generating process (effectively, you get to see the "population" and the true relationship). In this R code, the true model is $y_i = 2x_{1,i} + 5 + \epsilon_i$ but data is also provided on irrelevant variables $x_2$ and $x_3$. I have designed the simulation so that the the predictor variables are correlated, which would be a common occurrence in real-life data. We fit models which are correctly specified and overfitted (includes the irrelevant predictors and their interactions) on one portion of the generated data, then compare predictive performance on a holdout set. The multicollinearity of the predictors makes life even harder for the overfitted model, since it becomes harder for it to pick apart the effects of $x_1$, $x_2$ and $x_3$, but note that this does not bias any of the coefficient estimators.

require(MASS) #for multivariate normal simulation    
nsample <- 25   #sample to regress 
nholdout <- 1e6  #to check model predictions
Sigma <- matrix(c(1, 0.5, 0.4, 0.5, 1, 0.3, 0.4, 0.3, 1), nrow=3)
df <- as.data.frame(mvrnorm(n=(nsample+nholdout), mu=c(5,5,5), Sigma=Sigma))
colnames(df) <- c("x1", "x2", "x3")
df$y <- 5 + 2 * df$x1 + rnorm(n=nrow(df)) #y = 5 + *x1 + e

holdout.df <- df[1:nholdout,]
regress.df <- df[(nholdout+1):(nholdout+nsample),]

overfit.lm <- lm(y ~ x1*x2*x3, regress.df)
correctspec.lm <- lm(y ~ x1, regress.df)
summary(overfit.lm)
summary(correctspec.lm)

holdout.df$overfitPred <- predict.lm(overfit.lm, newdata=holdout.df)
holdout.df$correctSpecPred <- predict.lm(correctspec.lm, newdata=holdout.df)
with(holdout.df, sum((y - overfitPred)^2)) #SSE
with(holdout.df, sum((y - correctSpecPred)^2))

require(ggplot2)
errors.df <- data.frame(
    Model = rep(c("Overfitted", "Correctly specified"), each=nholdout),
    Error = with(holdout.df, c(y - overfitPred, y - correctSpecPred)))
ggplot(errors.df, aes(x=Error, color=Model)) + geom_density(size=1) +
    theme(legend.position="bottom")

Here are my results from one run, but it's best to run the simulation several times to see the effect of different generated samples.

>     summary(overfit.lm)

Call:
lm(formula = y ~ x1 * x2 * x3, data = regress.df)

Residuals:
     Min       1Q   Median       3Q      Max 
-2.22294 -0.63142 -0.09491  0.51983  2.24193 

Coefficients:
            Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|)
(Intercept) 18.85992   65.00775   0.290    0.775
x1          -2.40912   11.90433  -0.202    0.842
x2          -2.13777   12.48892  -0.171    0.866
x3          -1.13941   12.94670  -0.088    0.931
x1:x2        0.78280    2.25867   0.347    0.733
x1:x3        0.53616    2.30834   0.232    0.819
x2:x3        0.08019    2.49028   0.032    0.975
x1:x2:x3    -0.08584    0.43891  -0.196    0.847

Residual standard error: 1.101 on 17 degrees of freedom
Multiple R-squared: 0.8297,     Adjusted R-squared: 0.7596 
F-statistic: 11.84 on 7 and 17 DF,  p-value: 1.942e-05

These coefficient estimates for the overfitted model are terrible - should be about 5 for the intercept, 2 for $x_1$ and 0 for the rest. But the standard errors are also large. The correct values for those parameters do lie well within the 95% confidence intervals in each case. The $R^2$ is 0.8297 which suggests a reasonable fit.

>     summary(correctspec.lm)

Call:
lm(formula = y ~ x1, data = regress.df)

Residuals:
    Min      1Q  Median      3Q     Max 
-2.4951 -0.4112 -0.2000  0.7876  2.1706 

Coefficients:
            Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|)    
(Intercept)   4.7844     1.1272   4.244 0.000306 ***
x1            1.9974     0.2108   9.476 2.09e-09 ***
---
Signif. codes:  0 ‘***’ 0.001 ‘**’ 0.01 ‘*’ 0.05 ‘.’ 0.1 ‘ ’ 1 

Residual standard error: 1.036 on 23 degrees of freedom
Multiple R-squared: 0.7961,     Adjusted R-squared: 0.7872 
F-statistic:  89.8 on 1 and 23 DF,  p-value: 2.089e-09

The coefficient estimates are much better for the correctly specified model. But note that the $R^2$ is lower, at 0.7961, as the less complex model has less flexibility in fitting the observed responses. $R^2$ is more dangerous than useful in this case!

>     with(holdout.df, sum((y - overfitPred)^2)) #SSE
[1] 1271557
>     with(holdout.df, sum((y - correctSpecPred)^2))
[1] 1052217

The higher $R^2$ on the sample we regressed on showed how the overfitted model produced predictions, $\hat{y}$, that were closer to the observed $y$ than the correctly specified model could. But that's because it was overfitting to that data (and had more degrees of freedom to do so than the correctly specified model did, so could produce a "better" fit). Look at the Sum of Squared Errors for the predictions on the holdout set, which we didn't use to estimate the regression coefficients from, and we can see how much worse the overfitted model has performed. In reality the correctly specified model is the one which makes the best predictions. We shouldn't base our assessment of the predictive performance on the results from the set of data we used to estimate the models. Here's a density plot of the errors, with the correct model specification producing more errors close to 0:

Prediction errors on holdout set

The simulation clearly represents many relevant real-life situations (just imagine any real-life response which depends on a single predictor, and imagine including extraneous "predictors" into the model) but has the benefit that you can play with the data-generating process, the sample sizes, the nature of the overfitted model and so on. This is the best way you can examine the effects of overfitting since for observed data you don't generally have access to the DGP, and it's still "real" data in the sense that you can examine and use it. Here are some worthwhile ideas that you should experiment with:

  • Run the simulation several times and see how the results differ. You will find more variability using small sample sizes than large ones.
  • Try changing the sample sizes. If increased to, say, n <- 1e6, then the overfitted model eventually estimates reasonable coefficients (about 5 for intercept, about 2 for $x_1$, about 0 for everything else) and its predictive performance as measured by SSE doesn't trail the correctly specified model so badly. Conversely, try fitting on a very small sample (bear in mind you need to leave enough degrees of freedom to estimate all the coefficients) and you will see that the overfitted model has appalling performance both for estimating coefficients and predicting for new data.
  • Try reducing the correlation between the predictor variables by playing with the off-diagonal elements of the variance-covariance matrix Sigma. Just remember to keep it positive semi-definite (which includes being symmetric). You should find if you reduce the multicollinearity, the overfitted model doesn't perform quite so badly. But bear in mind that correlated predictors do occur in real life.
  • Try experimenting with the specification of the overfitted model. What if you include polynomial terms?
  • What if you simulate data for a different region of predictors, rather than having their mean all around 5? If the correct data generating process for $y$ is still df$y <- 5 + 2*df$x1 + rnorm(n=nrow(df)), see how well the models fitted to the original data can predict that $y$. Depending on how you generate the $x_i$ values, you may find that extrapolation with the overfitted model produces predictions far worse than the correctly specified model.
  • What if you change the data generating process so that $y$ now depends, weakly, on $x_2$, $x3$ and perhaps the interactions as well? This may be a more realistic scenario that depending on $x_1$ alone. If you use e.g. df$y <- 5 + 2 * df$x1 + 0.1*df$x2 + 0.1*df$x3 + rnorm(n=nrow(df)) then $x_2$ and $x_3$ are "almost irrelevant", but not quite. (Note that I drew all the $x$ variables from the same range, so it does make sense to compare their coefficients like that.) Then the simple model involving only $x_1$ suffers omitted variable bias, though since $x_2$ and $x_3$ are not particularly important, this is not too severe. On a small sample, e.g. nsample <- 25, the full model is still overfitted, despite being a better representation of the underlying population, and on repeated simulations its predictive performance on the holdout set is still consistently worse. With such limited data, it's more important to get a good estimate for the coefficient of $x_1$ than to expend information on the luxury of estimating the less important coefficients. With the effects of $x_2$ and $x_3$ being so hard to discern in a small sample, the full model is effectively using the flexibility from its extra degrees of freedom to "fit the noise" and this generalises poorly. But with nsample <- 1e6, it can estimate the weaker effects pretty well, and simulations show the complex model has predictive power that outperforms the simple one. This shows how "overfitting" is an issue of both model complexity and the available data.
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    $\begingroup$ (-1) It's rather important to understand that over-fitting doesn't solely result from the inclusion of "irrelevant" or "extraneous" terms that wouldn't appear in a correctly specified model. Indeed it might be argued that in many applications the idea of a simple true model doesn't make much sense & the challenge of predictive modelling is to build a model whose complexity is proportioned to the amount of available data. $\endgroup$ Dec 12, 2014 at 11:34
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    $\begingroup$ I'll send your picture to my Congressman in support of immigration reform $\endgroup$
    – prototype
    Dec 12, 2014 at 22:22
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    $\begingroup$ (+1) I think the edits improve the explanation of over-fitting without sacrificing understandability. $\endgroup$ Dec 13, 2014 at 19:05
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    $\begingroup$ @Aksakal I tried to address the question: "I need help as to how to come up with a real-world example that applies to overfitting". It's unclear if OP was asked to find a published paper which overfit, or - a more natural meaning of "come up with" - to construct their own example. If overfitting is bad then why in real life would anyone overfit? My answer, that an analyst may prefer to err for an overspecified vs underspecified model (due to fear of OVB or suspicion a relationship is curvilinear) is such an example. The graph/simulation simply show the consequence: bad out-of-sample prediction $\endgroup$
    – Silverfish
    Dec 15, 2014 at 14:10
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    $\begingroup$ @Aksakal It's not clear to me that a polynomial model is "unreal" for the graph. The dominant feature is linear, but do we know it's completely linear? If we had access to a hypothetical million political units & I had to stake my life either way, I'd rather gamble we'd detect a slight curvilinear relationship than that all polynomial terms would be insignificant. Despite this, fitting to low n, only a linear model avoids overfitting. (We can't resolve this due to difficulty sampling from the theoretically infinite population of "possible US states"; this is an advantage of simulated data!) $\endgroup$
    – Silverfish
    Dec 15, 2014 at 14:30
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A form of overfitting is fairly common in sports, namely to identify patterns to explain past results by factors that have no or at best vague power to predict future results. A common feature of these "patterns" is that they are often based on very few cases so that pure chance is probably the most plausible explanation for the pattern.

Examples include things like (the "quotes" are made up by me, but often look similar)

Team A has won all X games since the coach has starting wearing his magical red jacket.

Similar:

We shall not be shaving ourselves during the playoffs, because that has helped us win the past X games.

Less superstitious, but a form of overfitting as well:

Borussia Dortmund has never lost a Champions League home game to a Spanish opponent when they have lost the previous Bundesliga away game by more than two goals, having scored at least once themselves.

Similar:

Roger Federer has won all his Davis Cup appearances to European opponents when he had at least reached the semi-finals in that year's Australian Open.

The first two are fairly obvious nonsense (at least to me). The last two examples may perfectly well hold true in sample (i.e., in the past), but I would be most happy to bet against an opponent who would let this "information" substantially affect his odds for Dortmund beating Madrid if they lost 4:1 at Schalke on the previous Saturday or Federer beating Djokovic, even if he won the Australian Open that year.

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When I was trying to understand this myself, I started thinking in terms of analogies with describing real objects, so I guess it's as "real world" as you can get, if you want to understand the general idea:

Say you want to describe to someone the concept of a chair, so that they get a conceptual model that allows them to predict if a new object they find is a chair. You go to Ikea and get a sample of chairs, and start describing them by using two variables: it's an object with 4 legs where you can sit. Well, that may also describe a stool or a bed or a lot of other things. Your model is underfitting, just as if you were to try and model a complex distribution with too few variables - a lot of non-chair things will be identified as chairs. So, let's increase the number of variables, add that the object has to have a back, for example. Now you have a pretty acceptable model that describes your set of chairs, but is general enough to allow a new object to be identified as one. Your model describes the data, and is able to make predictions. However, say you happen to have got a set where all chairs are black or white, and made of wood. You decide to include those variables in your model, and suddenly it won't identify a plastic yellow chair as a chair. So, you've overfitted your model, you have included features of your dataset as if they were features of chairs in general, (if you prefer, you have identified "noise" as "signal", by interpreting random variation from your sample as a feature of the whole "real world chairs"). So, you either increase your sample and hope to include some new material and colors, or decrease the number of variables in your models.

This may be a simplistic analogy and breakdown under further scrutiny, but I think it works as a general conceptualization... Let me know if some part needs clarification.

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  • $\begingroup$ Could you please explain in more detail the idea of "noise" and "signal" and the fact that overfitted model describes noise cause I am having problem understanding this. $\endgroup$
    – Quirik
    Apr 13, 2017 at 11:58
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In predictive modeling, the idea is to use the data at hand to discover the trends that exist and that can be generalized to future data. By including variables in your model that have some minor, non-significant effect you are abandoning this idea. What you are doing is considering the specific trends in your specific sample that are only there because of random noise instead of a true, underlying trend. In other words, a model with too many variables fits the noise rather than discovering the signal.

Here's an exaggerated illustration of what I'm talking about. Here the dots are the observed data and the line is our model. Look at that a perfect fit - what a great model! But did we really discover the trend or are we just fitting to the noise? Likely the latter.

enter image description here

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Here is a "real world" example not in the sense that somebody happened to come across it in research, but in the sense that it uses everyday concepts without many statistic-specific terms. Maybe this way of saying it will be more helpful for some people whose training is in other fields.

Imagine that you have a database with data about patients with a rare disease. You are a medical graduate student and want to see if you can recognize risk factors for this disease. There have been 8 cases of the disease in this hospital, and you have recorded 100 random pieces of information about them: age, race, birth order, have they had measles as a child, whatever. You also have recorded the data for 8 patients without this disease.

You decide to use the following heuristic for risk factors: if a factor takes a given value in more than one of your diseased patients, but in 0 of your controls, you will consider it a risk factor. (In real life, you'd use a better method, but I want to keep it simple). You find out that 6 of your patients are vegetarians (but none of the controls is vegetarian), 3 have Swedish ancestors, and two of them have a stuttering speech impairment. Out of the other 97 factors, there is nothing which occurs in more than one patient, but is not present among the controls.

Years later, somebody else takes interest in this orphan disease and replicates your research. Because he works at a larger hospital, which has a data-sharing cooperation with other hospitals, he can use data about 106 cases, as opposed to your 8 cases. And he finds out that the prevalence of stutterers is the same in the patient group and the control group; stuttering is not a risk factor.

What happened here is that your small group had 25% stutterers by random chance. Your heuristic had no way of knowing if this is medically relevant or not. You gave it criteria to decide when you consider a pattern in the data "interesting" enough to be included in the model, and according to these criteria, the stuttering was interesting enough.

Your model has been overfitted, because it mistakenly included a parameter which is not really relevant in the real world. It fits your sample - the 8 patients + 8 controls - very well, but it does not fit the real world data. When a model describes your sample better than it describes reality, it's called overfitted.

Had you chosen a threshold of 3 out of 8 patients having a feature, it wouldn't have happened - but you'd had a higher chance to miss something actually interesting. Especially in medicine, where many diseases only happen in a small fraction of people exhibiting in risk factor, that's a hard trade-off to make. And there are methods to avoid it (basically, compare to a second sample and see if the explaining power stays the same or falls), but this is a topic for another question.

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  • $\begingroup$ Very reminiscent of xkcd.com/882 $\endgroup$
    – Floris
    Dec 16, 2014 at 21:24
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Here's a real-life example of overfitting that I helped perpetrate and then tried (unsuccessfully) to avert:

I had several thousand independent, bivariate time series, each with no more than 50 data points, and the modeling project involved fitting a vector autoregression (VAR) to each one. No attempt was made to regularize across observations, estimate variance components, or anything like that. The time points were measured over the course of a single year, so the data were subject to all kinds of seasonal and cyclical effects that only appeared once in each time series.

One subset of the data exhibited an implausibly high rate of Granger causality compared to the rest of the data. Spot checks revealed that positive spikes were occurring one or two lags apart in this subset, but it was clear from the context that both spikes were caused directly by an external source and that one spike was not causing the other. Out-of-sample forecasts using this models would probably be quite wrong, because the models were overfitted: rather than "smoothing out" the spikes by averaging them into the rest of the data, there were few enough observations that the spikes were actually driving the estimates.

Overall, I don't think the project went badly but I don't think it produced results that were anywhere near as useful as they could have been. Part of the reason for this is that the many-independent-VARs procedure, even with just one or two lags, was having a hard time distinguishing between data and noise, and so was fitting to the latter at the expense of providing insight about the former.

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My favourite is the “3964 formula” discovered before the World Cup soccer competition in 1998:

Brazil won the championships in 1970 and 1994. Sum up these 2 numbers and you will get 3964; Germany won in 1974 and 1990, adding up again to 3964; the same thing with Argentina winning in 1978 and 1986 (1978+1986 = 3964).

This is a very surprising fact, but everyone can see that it is not advisable to base any future prediction on that rule. And indeed, the rule gives that the winner of the World Cup in 1998 should have been England since 1966 + 1998 = 3964 and England won in 1966. This didn’t happen and the winner was France.

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Studying for an exam by memorising the answers to last year's exam.

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Many intelligent people in this thread --- many much more versed in statistics than I am. But I still don't see an easy-to-understand to the lay-person example. The Presidential example doesn't quite hit the bill in terms of typical overfitting, because while it is technically overfitting in each one of its wild claims, usually an overfitting model overfits -ALL- the given noise, not just one element of it.

I really like the chart in the bias-variance tradeoff explanation in wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bias%E2%80%93variance_tradeoff

(The lowermost chart is the example of overfitting).

I'm hard pressed to think of a real world example that doesn't sound like complete mumbo-jumbo. The idea is that data is part caused by measurable, understandable variables --- part random noise. Attempting to model this noise as a pattern gives you inaccuracy.

A classic example is modeling based SOLELY on R^2 in MS Excel (you are attempting to fit an equation/ model literally as close as possible to the data using polynomials, no matter how nonsensical).

Say you're trying to model ice cream sales as a function of temperature. You have "real world" data. You plot the data and try to maximize R^2. You'll find using real-world data, the closest fit equation is not linear or quadratic (which would make logical sense). Like almost all equations, the more nonsensical polynomial terms you add (x^6 -2x^5 +3x^4+30x^3-43.2x^2-29x) -- the closer it fits the data. So how does that sensibly relate temperature to ice cream sales? How would you explain that ridiculous polynomial? Truth is, it's not the true model. You've overfit the data.

You are taking unaccounted for noise -- which may have been due to sales promotions or some other variable or "noise" like a butterfly flapping its wings in the cosmos (something never predictable)--- and attempted to model that based on temperature. Now usually if your noise/ error does not average to zero or is auto-correlated, etc, it means there are more variables out there --- and then eventually you get to generally randomly distributed noise, but still, that's the best I can explain it.

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    $\begingroup$ The later 'models' in the Presidential comic do fit all the given noise. $\endgroup$
    – Ben Voigt
    Dec 13, 2014 at 16:30
  • $\begingroup$ The comic isn't analagous to most overfitting scenarios in my opinion, even though the ridiculous rules would accurately predict all past Presidents. Most forecasts aren't predicting a dichotomous variable. Also it humorously mentions the very rule that will be broken in the next election -- in other words the overfit model is gauranteed wrong the whole time, making it a perfect predictor of the future. Most overfit models aren't based on 1 erroneous variable that can be tested for being extraneous- it's usually based on too many variables in the model, haphazardly all thrown in to reduce R^2. $\endgroup$ Dec 15, 2014 at 18:03
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Most optimization methods have some fudge factors aka hyperparameters. A real example:

For all systems under study, the following parameters yielded a fast and robust behavior: $N_{min} = 5,\ \ f_{inc} = 1.1,\ \ f_{dec} = 0.5,\ \ \alpha_{start} = 0.1, \ \ f_{\alpha} = 0.99.$

Is this over fitting, or just fitting to a particular set of problems ?

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A bit intuitive, but maybe it'll help. Let's say you want to learn some new language. How do you learn? instead of learning the rules in a course, you use examples. Specifically, TV shows. So you like crime shows, and you watch few series of some cop show. Then, you take another crime show and watch some series form that one. By the third show you see - you know almost everything, no problem. You don't need the English subtitles.

But then you try your newly learned language on the street on your next visit, and you realize you can't talk about anything other than saying "officer! that man took my bag and shot that lady!". While your 'training error' was zero, your 'test error' is high, due to 'overfitting' the language, studying only a limited subset of words and assuming its enough.

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    $\begingroup$ That's not overfitting, it's just learning a subset of language. Overfitting would be if after watching crime shows you learn an entire, but weird, language that coincides with English on all crime-related topics but is total gibberish (or maybe Chinese) when you speak about any other topic. $\endgroup$
    – amoeba
    Dec 11, 2014 at 22:13

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