LGMLMay 29, 2025

Why Machine Learning Models Fail to Fully Capture Epistemic Uncertainty

arXiv:2505.23506v24 citationsh-index: 3
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses a fundamental limitation in uncertainty quantification for machine learning practitioners, though it appears incremental in refining existing frameworks.

The paper argues that current supervised learning methods fail to capture critical components of epistemic uncertainty, particularly due to model bias, and shows through theoretical insights and synthetic experiments that high model bias leads to misleadingly low epistemic uncertainty estimates.

In recent years various supervised learning methods that disentangle aleatoric and epistemic uncertainty based on second-order distributions have been proposed. We argue that these methods fail to capture critical components of epistemic uncertainty, particularly due to the often-neglected component of model bias. To show this, we make use of a more fine-grained taxonomy of epistemic uncertainty sources in machine learning models, and analyse how the classical bias-variance decomposition of the expected prediction error can be decomposed into different parts reflecting these uncertainties. By using a simulation-based evaluation protocol which encompasses epistemic uncertainty due to both procedural- and data-driven uncertainty components, we illustrate that current methods rarely capture the full spectrum of epistemic uncertainty. Through theoretical insights and synthetic experiments, we show that high model bias can lead to misleadingly low estimates of epistemic uncertainty, and common second-order uncertainty quantification methods systematically blur bias-induced errors into aleatoric estimates, thereby underrepresenting epistemic uncertainty. Our findings underscore that meaningful aleatoric estimates are feasible only if all relevant sources of epistemic uncertainty are properly represented.

Foundations

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

Your Notes