LGAIMLJan 15, 2025

Towards Understanding Extrapolation: a Causal Lens

Peking U
arXiv:2501.09163v16 citationsh-index: 42NIPS
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This work addresses a critical challenge in practical ML applications where distribution shifts occur with limited off-support samples, offering a causal framework for extrapolation.

The paper tackles the problem of extrapolation in machine learning, where models must generalize to target samples outside the training distribution, and provides theoretical conditions and methods for achieving this with minimal target data, validated through experiments.

Canonical work handling distribution shifts typically necessitates an entire target distribution that lands inside the training distribution. However, practical scenarios often involve only a handful of target samples, potentially lying outside the training support, which requires the capability of extrapolation. In this work, we aim to provide a theoretical understanding of when extrapolation is possible and offer principled methods to achieve it without requiring an on-support target distribution. To this end, we formulate the extrapolation problem with a latent-variable model that embodies the minimal change principle in causal mechanisms. Under this formulation, we cast the extrapolation problem into a latent-variable identification problem. We provide realistic conditions on shift properties and the estimation objectives that lead to identification even when only one off-support target sample is available, tackling the most challenging scenarios. Our theory reveals the intricate interplay between the underlying manifold's smoothness and the shift properties. We showcase how our theoretical results inform the design of practical adaptation algorithms. Through experiments on both synthetic and real-world data, we validate our theoretical findings and their practical implications.

Foundations

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

Your Notes