LGAIJun 27, 2022

Agreement-on-the-Line: Predicting the Performance of Neural Networks under Distribution Shift

arXiv:2206.13089v2112 citationsh-index: 27
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This provides a practical tool for model evaluation under distribution shift, especially for neural network classifiers, though it builds incrementally on prior work on accuracy-on-the-line.

The paper tackles the problem of predicting out-of-distribution (OOD) accuracy for neural networks without labeled OOD data by discovering that agreement between pairs of classifiers shows a strong linear correlation similar to accuracy-on-the-line, enabling practical OOD performance estimation using only unlabeled data, with their algorithm outperforming previous methods.

Recently, Miller et al. showed that a model's in-distribution (ID) accuracy has a strong linear correlation with its out-of-distribution (OOD) accuracy on several OOD benchmarks -- a phenomenon they dubbed ''accuracy-on-the-line''. While a useful tool for model selection (i.e., the model most likely to perform the best OOD is the one with highest ID accuracy), this fact does not help estimate the actual OOD performance of models without access to a labeled OOD validation set. In this paper, we show a similar but surprising phenomenon also holds for the agreement between pairs of neural network classifiers: whenever accuracy-on-the-line holds, we observe that the OOD agreement between the predictions of any two pairs of neural networks (with potentially different architectures) also observes a strong linear correlation with their ID agreement. Furthermore, we observe that the slope and bias of OOD vs ID agreement closely matches that of OOD vs ID accuracy. This phenomenon, which we call agreement-on-the-line, has important practical applications: without any labeled data, we can predict the OOD accuracy of classifiers}, since OOD agreement can be estimated with just unlabeled data. Our prediction algorithm outperforms previous methods both in shifts where agreement-on-the-line holds and, surprisingly, when accuracy is not on the line. This phenomenon also provides new insights into deep neural networks: unlike accuracy-on-the-line, agreement-on-the-line appears to only hold for neural network classifiers.

Code Implementations1 repo
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The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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