Detail

Adaptive, distribution-free prediction intervals for deep neural networks

Author(s)
Danijel Kivaranovic, Kory Johnson, Hannes Leeb
Abstract

This paper addresses the problem of assessing the variability of predictions from deep neural networks. There is a growing literature on using and improving the predictive accuracy of deep networks, but a concomitant improvement in the quantification of their uncertainty is lacking. We provide a prediction interval network (PI-Network) which is a transparent, tractable modification of the standard predictive loss used to train deep networks. The PI-Network outputs three values instead of a single point estimate and optimizes a loss function inspired by quantile regression. We go beyond merely motivating the construction of these networks and provide two prediction interval methods with provable, finite sample coverage guarantees without any assumptions on the underlying distribution from which our data is drawn. We only require that the observations are independent and identically distributed. Furthermore, our intervals adapt to heteroskedasticity and asymmetry in the conditional distribution of the response given the covariates. The first method leverages the conformal inference framework and provides average coverage. The second method provides a new, stronger guarantee by conditioning on the observed data. Lastly, our loss function does not compromise the predictive accuracy of the network like other prediction interval methods. We demonstrate the ease of use of the PI-Network as well as its improvements over other methods on both simulated and real data. As the PI-Network can be used with a host of deep learning methods with only minor modifications, its use should become standard practice, much like reporting standard errors along with mean estimates.

Organisation(s)
Department of Statistics and Operations Research, Research Network Data Science
External organisation(s)
Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien (WU)
Journal
Proceedings of Machine Learning Research
Volume
108
Pages
4346-4356
ISSN
2640-3498
Publication date
2020
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
102019 Machine learning, 101018 Statistics
Keywords
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/c7de22f1-95eb-4d15-8029-42415b8fe3b8