Danielle Cohen

AI
h-index61
3papers
7citations
Novelty65%
AI Score39

3 Papers

CVApr 9, 2025
A Meaningful Perturbation Metric for Evaluating Explainability Methods

Danielle Cohen, Hila Chefer, Lior Wolf

Deep neural networks (DNNs) have demonstrated remarkable success, yet their wide adoption is often hindered by their opaque decision-making. To address this, attribution methods have been proposed to assign relevance values to each part of the input. However, different methods often produce entirely different relevance maps, necessitating the development of standardized metrics to evaluate them. Typically, such evaluation is performed through perturbation, wherein high- or low-relevance regions of the input image are manipulated to examine the change in prediction. In this work, we introduce a novel approach, which harnesses image generation models to perform targeted perturbation. Specifically, we focus on inpainting only the high-relevance pixels of an input image to modify the model's predictions while preserving image fidelity. This is in contrast to existing approaches, which often produce out-of-distribution modifications, leading to unreliable results. Through extensive experiments, we demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach in generating meaningful rankings across a wide range of models and attribution methods. Crucially, we establish that the ranking produced by our metric exhibits significantly higher correlation with human preferences compared to existing approaches, underscoring its potential for enhancing interpretability in DNNs.

AIFeb 11, 2025
Bi-Fact: A Bidirectional Factorization-based Evaluation of Intent Extraction from UI Trajectories

Sapir Caduri, Anatoly Efros, Noam Kahlon et al.

Evaluating intent extraction from GUIs demands accurate, fine-grained metrics. This paper introduces Bi-Fact, a novel method that decomposes intents into atomic facts and performs bidirectional comparisons to assess precision and recall. Experiments demonstrate Bi-Fact's superior correlation with human judgments compared to existing metrics, establishing a more robust evaluation framework for UI-driven intent understanding.

AISep 15, 2025
Small Models, Big Results: Achieving Superior Intent Extraction through Decomposition

Danielle Cohen, Yoni Halpern, Noam Kahlon et al.

Understanding user intents from UI interaction trajectories remains a challenging, yet crucial, frontier in intelligent agent development. While massive, datacenter-based, multi-modal large language models (MLLMs) possess greater capacity to handle the complexities of such sequences, smaller models which can run on-device to provide a privacy-preserving, low-cost, and low-latency user experience, struggle with accurate intent inference. We address these limitations by introducing a novel decomposed approach: first, we perform structured interaction summarization, capturing key information from each user action. Second, we perform intent extraction using a fine-tuned model operating on the aggregated summaries. This method improves intent understanding in resource-constrained models, even surpassing the base performance of large MLLMs.