Discriminative Learning of Prediction Intervals
This work addresses the computational and statistical limitations of existing methods for prediction intervals in regression, offering a more flexible approach for batch settings.
The paper tackles the problem of constructing prediction intervals for multiple test points by introducing a discriminative learning framework that optimizes expected error rates under a size constraint, leading to improved accuracy or reduced interval sizes as demonstrated empirically.
In this work we consider the task of constructing prediction intervals in an inductive batch setting. We present a discriminative learning framework which optimizes the expected error rate under a budget constraint on the interval sizes. Most current methods for constructing prediction intervals offer guarantees for a single new test point. Applying these methods to multiple test points can result in a high computational overhead and degraded statistical guarantees. By focusing on expected errors, our method allows for variability in the per-example conditional error rates. As we demonstrate both analytically and empirically, this flexibility can increase the overall accuracy, or alternatively, reduce the average interval size. While the problem we consider is of a regressive flavor, the loss we use is combinatorial. This allows us to provide PAC-style, finite-sample guarantees. Computationally, we show that our original objective is NP-hard, and suggest a tractable convex surrogate. We conclude with a series of experimental evaluations.