LGAIJul 25, 2025

On Arbitrary Predictions from Equally Valid Models

arXiv:2507.19408v1h-index: 36
Originality Incremental advance
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This addresses a critical reliability problem in medical diagnostics, where arbitrary predictions could lead to misdiagnoses, though the solution is incremental as it builds on existing ensemble methods.

The study tackled the problem of model multiplicity in medical machine learning, where equally valid models produce conflicting predictions for the same patient, and found that using small ensembles with abstention strategies can effectively mitigate this issue, reducing arbitrary diagnoses.

Model multiplicity refers to the existence of multiple machine learning models that describe the data equally well but may produce different predictions on individual samples. In medicine, these models can admit conflicting predictions for the same patient -- a risk that is poorly understood and insufficiently addressed. In this study, we empirically analyze the extent, drivers, and ramifications of predictive multiplicity across diverse medical tasks and model architectures, and show that even small ensembles can mitigate/eliminate predictive multiplicity in practice. Our analysis reveals that (1) standard validation metrics fail to identify a uniquely optimal model and (2) a substantial amount of predictions hinges on arbitrary choices made during model development. Using multiple models instead of a single model reveals instances where predictions differ across equally plausible models -- highlighting patients that would receive arbitrary diagnoses if any single model were used. In contrast, (3) a small ensemble paired with an abstention strategy can effectively mitigate measurable predictive multiplicity in practice; predictions with high inter-model consensus may thus be amenable to automated classification. While accuracy is not a principled antidote to predictive multiplicity, we find that (4) higher accuracy achieved through increased model capacity reduces predictive multiplicity. Our findings underscore the clinical importance of accounting for model multiplicity and advocate for ensemble-based strategies to improve diagnostic reliability. In cases where models fail to reach sufficient consensus, we recommend deferring decisions to expert review.

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