Identifying Statistical Bias in Dataset Replication

Abstract

Dataset replication is a useful tool for assessing whether improvements in test accuracy on a specific benchmark correspond to improvements in models’ ability to generalize reliably. In this work, we present unintuitive yet significant ways in which standard approaches to dataset replication introduce statistical bias, skewing the resulting observations. We study ImageNet-v2, a replication of the ImageNet dataset on which models exhibit a significant (11-14%) drop in accuracy, even after controlling for selection frequency, a human-in-the-loop measure of data quality. We show that after remeasuring selection frequencies and correcting for statistical bias, only an estimated 3.6% of the original 11.7% accuracy drop remains unaccounted for. We conclude with concrete recommendations for recognizing and avoiding bias in dataset replication. Code for our study is publicly available: https://git.io/data-rep-analysis.

Cite

Text

Engstrom et al. "Identifying Statistical Bias in Dataset Replication." International Conference on Machine Learning, 2020.

Markdown

[Engstrom et al. "Identifying Statistical Bias in Dataset Replication." International Conference on Machine Learning, 2020.](https://mlanthology.org/icml/2020/engstrom2020icml-identifying/)

BibTeX

@inproceedings{engstrom2020icml-identifying,
  title     = {{Identifying Statistical Bias in Dataset Replication}},
  author    = {Engstrom, Logan and Ilyas, Andrew and Santurkar, Shibani and Tsipras, Dimitris and Steinhardt, Jacob and Madry, Aleksander},
  booktitle = {International Conference on Machine Learning},
  year      = {2020},
  pages     = {2922-2932},
  volume    = {119},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/icml/2020/engstrom2020icml-identifying/}
}