DBAIFeb 16, 2025

Generating Skyline Datasets for Data Science Models

arXiv:2502.11262v11 citationsh-index: 7EDBT
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses dataset preparation bias for data scientists, though it is incremental as it builds on existing data discovery methods.

The paper tackles the problem of dataset bias in data-driven AI models by introducing MODis, a framework that selects and integrates data sources into skyline datasets optimized for multiple user-defined performance measures, resulting in efficient algorithms that reduce bias and improve model performance.

Preparing high-quality datasets required by various data-driven AI and machine learning models has become a cornerstone task in data-driven analysis. Conventional data discovery methods typically integrate datasets towards a single pre-defined quality measure that may lead to bias for downstream tasks. This paper introduces MODis, a framework that discovers datasets by optimizing multiple user-defined, model-performance measures. Given a set of data sources and a model, MODis selects and integrates data sources into a skyline dataset, over which the model is expected to have the desired performance in all the performance measures. We formulate MODis as a multi-goal finite state transducer, and derive three feasible algorithms to generate skyline datasets. Our first algorithm adopts a "reduce-from-universal" strategy, that starts with a universal schema and iteratively prunes unpromising data. Our second algorithm further reduces the cost with a bi-directional strategy that interleaves data augmentation and reduction. We also introduce a diversification algorithm to mitigate the bias in skyline datasets. We experimentally verify the efficiency and effectiveness of our skyline data discovery algorithms, and showcase their applications in optimizing data science pipelines.

Foundations

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