DSLGMay 19, 2025

Robust learning of halfspaces under log-concave marginals

arXiv:2505.13708v11 citationsh-index: 7
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of robust learning for halfspaces, which is incremental as it builds on polynomial regression with new constraints and steps.

The paper tackles the problem of learning adversarially robust classifiers with small boundary volume under log-concave distributions, achieving a boundary volume of O(r + ε) with computational efficiency matching polynomial regression.

We say that a classifier is \emph{adversarially robust} to perturbations of norm $r$ if, with high probability over a point $x$ drawn from the input distribution, there is no point within distance $\le r$ from $x$ that is classified differently. The \emph{boundary volume} is the probability that a point falls within distance $r$ of a point with a different label. This work studies the task of computationally efficient learning of hypotheses with small boundary volume, where the input is distributed as a subgaussian isotropic log-concave distribution over $\mathbb{R}^d$. Linear threshold functions are adversarially robust; they have boundary volume proportional to $r$. Such concept classes are efficiently learnable by polynomial regression, which produces a polynomial threshold function (PTF), but PTFs in general may have boundary volume $Ω(1)$, even for $r \ll 1$. We give an algorithm that agnostically learns linear threshold functions and returns a classifier with boundary volume $O(r+\varepsilon)$ at radius of perturbation $r$. The time and sample complexity of $d^{\tilde{O}(1/\varepsilon^2)}$ matches the complexity of polynomial regression. Our algorithm augments the classic approach of polynomial regression with three additional steps: a) performing the $\ell_1$-error regression under noise sensitivity constraints, b) a structured partitioning and rounding step that returns a Boolean classifier with error $\textsf{opt} + O(\varepsilon)$ and noise sensitivity $O(r+\varepsilon)$ simultaneously, and c) a local corrector that ``smooths'' a function with low noise sensitivity into a function that is adversarially robust.

Foundations

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

Your Notes