LGAICLCVIRJul 14, 2021

The Benchmark Lottery

arXiv:2107.07002v1139 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This highlights a critical issue for the ML research community, as it challenges the reliability of benchmarks used to evaluate algorithms across domains like NLP and computer vision.

The paper identifies the fragility of ML benchmarking, showing that algorithm performance rankings can change significantly based on benchmark choice, which may lead to biased progress in the field.

The world of empirical machine learning (ML) strongly relies on benchmarks in order to determine the relative effectiveness of different algorithms and methods. This paper proposes the notion of "a benchmark lottery" that describes the overall fragility of the ML benchmarking process. The benchmark lottery postulates that many factors, other than fundamental algorithmic superiority, may lead to a method being perceived as superior. On multiple benchmark setups that are prevalent in the ML community, we show that the relative performance of algorithms may be altered significantly simply by choosing different benchmark tasks, highlighting the fragility of the current paradigms and potential fallacious interpretation derived from benchmarking ML methods. Given that every benchmark makes a statement about what it perceives to be important, we argue that this might lead to biased progress in the community. We discuss the implications of the observed phenomena and provide recommendations on mitigating them using multiple machine learning domains and communities as use cases, including natural language processing, computer vision, information retrieval, recommender systems, and reinforcement learning.

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