CLJun 21, 2023

On Evaluation of Document Classification using RVL-CDIP

arXiv:2306.12550v17 citationsh-index: 19
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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This highlights problems in a widely used benchmark, potentially affecting researchers and practitioners in document classification.

The paper identifies several issues with the RVL-CDIP benchmark for document classification, including 8.1% label noise, test-train overlap, and privacy concerns, arguing it is unreliable for benchmarking and calling for a new benchmark.

The RVL-CDIP benchmark is widely used for measuring performance on the task of document classification. Despite its widespread use, we reveal several undesirable characteristics of the RVL-CDIP benchmark. These include (1) substantial amounts of label noise, which we estimate to be 8.1% (ranging between 1.6% to 16.9% per document category); (2) presence of many ambiguous or multi-label documents; (3) a large overlap between test and train splits, which can inflate model performance metrics; and (4) presence of sensitive personally-identifiable information like US Social Security numbers (SSNs). We argue that there is a risk in using RVL-CDIP for benchmarking document classifiers, as its limited scope, presence of errors (state-of-the-art models now achieve accuracy error rates that are within our estimated label error rate), and lack of diversity make it less than ideal for benchmarking. We further advocate for the creation of a new document classification benchmark, and provide recommendations for what characteristics such a resource should include.

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