Semi-Supervised Learning, Causality, and the Conditional Cluster Assumption

Abstract

While the success of semi-supervised learning (SSL) is still not fully understood, Schölkopf et al. (2012) have established a link to the principle of independent causal mechanisms. They conclude that SSL should be impossible when predicting a target variable from its causes, but possible when predicting it from its effects. Since both these cases are restrictive, we extend their work by considering classification using cause and effect features at the same time, such as predicting a disease from both risk factors and symptoms. While standard SSL exploits information contained in the marginal distribution of all inputs (to improve the estimate of the conditional distribution of the target given in-puts), we argue that in our more general setting we should use information in the conditional distribution of effect features given causal features. We explore how this insight generalises the previous understanding, and how it relates to and can be exploited algorithmically for SSL.

Cite

Text

Kügelgen et al. "Semi-Supervised Learning, Causality, and the Conditional Cluster Assumption." Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, 2020.

Markdown

[Kügelgen et al. "Semi-Supervised Learning, Causality, and the Conditional Cluster Assumption." Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, 2020.](https://mlanthology.org/uai/2020/kugelgen2020uai-semisupervised/)

BibTeX

@inproceedings{kugelgen2020uai-semisupervised,
  title     = {{Semi-Supervised Learning, Causality, and the Conditional Cluster Assumption}},
  author    = {Kügelgen, Julius and Mey, Alexander and Loog, Marco and Schölkopf, Bernhard},
  booktitle = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence},
  year      = {2020},
  pages     = {1-10},
  volume    = {124},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/uai/2020/kugelgen2020uai-semisupervised/}
}