Active Learning with Data Distribution Shift Detection for Updating Localization Systems

Author(s):  
Josh Barrows ◽  
Valentin Radu ◽  
Matthew Hill ◽  
Fabio Ciravegna
2002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriela Maletti ◽  
Bjarne K. Ersboll ◽  
Knut Conradsen

Author(s):  
Aditi Chaudhary ◽  
Antonios Anastasopoulos ◽  
Zaid Sheikh ◽  
Graham Neubig

Active learning (AL) uses a data selection algorithm to select useful training samples to minimize annotation cost. This is now an essential tool for building low-resource syntactic analyzers such as part-of-speech (POS) taggers. Existing AL heuristics are generally designed on the principle of selecting uncertain yet representative training instances, where annotating these instances may reduce a large number of errors. However, in an empirical study across six typologically diverse languages (German, Swedish, Galician, North Sami, Persian, and Ukrainian), we found the surprising result that even in an oracle scenario where we know the true uncertainty of predictions, these current heuristics are far from optimal. Based on this analysis, we pose the problem of AL as selecting instances that maximally reduce the confusion between particular pairs of output tags. Extensive experimentation on the aforementioned languages shows that our proposed AL strategy outperforms other AL strategies by a significant margin. We also present auxiliary results demonstrating the importance of proper calibration of models, which we ensure through cross-view training, and analysis demonstrating how our proposed strategy selects examples that more closely follow the oracle data distribution. The code is publicly released here. 1


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dipanwita Sinha Mukherjee ◽  
Divyanshy Bhandari ◽  
Naveen Yeri

<div>Any predictive software deployed with this hypothesis that test data distribution will not differ from training data distribution. Real time scenario does not follow this rule, which results inconsistent and non-transferable observation in various cases. This makes the dataset shift, a growing concern. In this paper, we’ve explored the recent concept of Label shift detection and classifier correction with the help of Black Box shift detection(BBSD), Black Box shift estimation(BBSE) and Black Box shift correction(BBSC). Digits dataset from ”sklearn” and ”LogisticRegression” classifier have been used for this investigation. Knock out shift was clearly detected by applying Kolmogorov–Smirnov test for BBSD. Performance of the classifier got improved after applying BBSE and BBSC from 91% to 97% in terms of overall accuracy.</div>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dipanwita Sinha Mukherjee ◽  
Divyanshy Bhandari ◽  
Naveen Yeri

<div>Any predictive software deployed with this hypothesis that test data distribution will not differ from training data distribution. Real time scenario does not follow this rule, which results inconsistent and non-transferable observation in various cases. This makes the dataset shift, a growing concern. In this paper, we’ve explored the recent concept of Label shift detection and classifier correction with the help of Black Box shift detection(BBSD), Black Box shift estimation(BBSE) and Black Box shift correction(BBSC). Digits dataset from ”sklearn” and ”LogisticRegression” classifier have been used for this investigation. Knock out shift was clearly detected by applying Kolmogorov–Smirnov test for BBSD. Performance of the classifier got improved after applying BBSE and BBSC from 91% to 97% in terms of overall accuracy.</div>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dipanwita Sinha Mukherjee ◽  
Divyanshy Bhandari ◽  
Naveen Yeri

<div>Any predictive software deployed with this hypothesis that test data distribution will not differ from training data distribution. Real time scenario does not follow this rule, which results inconsistent and non-transferable observation in various cases. This makes the dataset shift, a growing concern. In this paper, we’ve explored the recent concept of Label shift detection and classifier correction with the help of Black Box shift detection(BBSD), Black Box shift estimation(BBSE) and Black Box shift correction(BBSC). Digits dataset from ”sklearn” and ”LogisticRegression” classifier have been used for this investigation. Knock out shift was clearly detected by applying Kolmogorov–Smirnov test for BBSD. Performance of the classifier got improved after applying BBSE and BBSC from 91% to 97% in terms of overall accuracy.</div>


2017 ◽  
Vol 85 (8) ◽  
pp. 814-825 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ajeng J. Puspitasari ◽  
Jonathan W. Kanter ◽  
Andrew M. Busch ◽  
Rachel Leonard ◽  
Shira Dunsiger ◽  
...  

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