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 Inductive Learning


Symmetry From Scratch: Group Equivariance as a Supervised Learning Task

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

In machine learning datasets with symmetries, the paradigm for backward compatibility with symmetry-breaking has been to relax equivariant architectural constraints, engineering extra weights to differentiate symmetries of interest. However, this process becomes increasingly over-engineered as models are geared towards specific symmetries/asymmetries hardwired of a particular set of equivariant basis functions. In this work, we introduce symmetry-cloning, a method for inducing equivariance in machine learning models. We show that general machine learning architectures (i.e., MLPs) can learn symmetries directly as a supervised learning task from group equivariant architectures and retain/break the learned symmetry for downstream tasks. This simple formulation enables machine learning models with group-agnostic architectures to capture the inductive bias of group-equivariant architectures.


CUDLE: Learning Under Label Scarcity to Detect Cannabis Use in Uncontrolled Environments

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Wearable sensor systems have demonstrated a great potential for real-time, objective monitoring of physiological health to support behavioral interventions. However, obtaining accurate labels in free-living environments remains difficult due to limited human supervision and the reliance on self-labeling by patients, making data collection and supervised learning particularly challenging. To address this issue, we introduce CUDLE (Cannabis Use Detection with Label Efficiency), a novel framework that leverages self-supervised learning with real-world wearable sensor data to tackle a pressing healthcare challenge: the automatic detection of cannabis consumption in free-living environments. CUDLE identifies cannabis consumption moments using sensor-derived data through a contrastive learning framework. It first learns robust representations via a self-supervised pretext task with data augmentation. These representations are then fine-tuned in a downstream task with a shallow classifier, enabling CUDLE to outperform traditional supervised methods, especially with limited labeled data. To evaluate our approach, we conducted a clinical study with 20 cannabis users, collecting over 500 hours of wearable sensor data alongside user-reported cannabis use moments through EMA (Ecological Momentary Assessment) methods. Our extensive analysis using the collected data shows that CUDLE achieves a higher accuracy of 73.4%, compared to 71.1% for the supervised approach, with the performance gap widening as the number of labels decreases. Notably, CUDLE not only surpasses the supervised model while using 75% less labels, but also reaches peak performance with far fewer subjects.



Mean teachers are better role models: Weight-averaged consistency targets improve semi-supervised deep learning results

Neural Information Processing Systems

The recently proposed Temporal Ensembling has achieved state-of-the-art results in several semi-supervised learning benchmarks. It maintains an exponential moving average of label predictions on each training example, and penalizes predictions that are inconsistent with this target. However, because the targets change only once per epoch, Temporal Ensembling becomes unwieldy when learning large datasets. To overcome this problem, we propose Mean Teacher, a method that averages model weights instead of label predictions. As an additional benefit, Mean Teacher improves test accuracy and enables training with fewer labels than Temporal Ensembling. Without changing the network architecture, Mean Teacher achieves an error rate of 4.35% on SVHN with 250 labels, outperforming Temporal Ensembling trained with 1000 labels. We also show that a good network architecture is crucial to performance. Combining Mean Teacher and Residual Networks, we improve the state of the art on CIFAR-10 with 4000 labels from 10.55% to 6.28%, and on ImageNet 2012 with 10% of the labels from 35.24% to 9.11%.



Local Aggregative Games

Neural Information Processing Systems

Structured prediction methods have been remarkably successful in learning mappings between input observations and output configurations [1; 2; 3]. The central guiding formulation involves learning a scoring function that recovers the configuration as the highest scoring assignment. In contrast, in a game theoretic setting, myopic strategic interactions among players lead to a Nash equilibrium or locally optimal configuration rather than highest scoring global configuration. Learning games therefore involves, at best, enforcement of local consistency constraints as recently advocated [4].


On Structured Prediction Theory with Calibrated Convex Surrogate Losses

Neural Information Processing Systems

We provide novel theoretical insights on structured prediction in the context of efficient convex surrogate loss minimization with consistency guarantees. For any task loss, we construct a convex surrogate that can be optimized via stochastic gradient descent and we prove tight bounds on the so-called "calibration function" relating the excess surrogate risk to the actual risk. In contrast to prior related work, we carefully monitor the effect of the exponential number of classes in the learning guarantees as well as on the optimization complexity. As an interesting consequence, we formalize the intuition that some task losses make learning harder than others, and that the classical 0-1 loss is ill-suited for structured prediction.


An explainable approach to detect case law on housing and eviction issues within the HUDOC database

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Case law is instrumental in shaping our understanding of human rights, including the right to adequate housing. The HUDOC database provides access to the textual content of case law from the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), along with some metadata. While this metadata includes valuable information, such as the application number and the articles addressed in a case, it often lacks detailed substantive insights, such as the specific issues a case covers. This underscores the need for detailed analysis to extract such information. However, given the size of the database - containing over 40,000 cases - an automated solution is essential. In this study, we focus on the right to adequate housing and aim to build models to detect cases related to housing and eviction issues. Our experiments show that the resulting models not only provide performance comparable to more sophisticated approaches but are also interpretable, offering explanations for their decisions by highlighting the most influential words. The application of these models led to the identification of new cases that were initially overlooked during data collection. This suggests that NLP approaches can be effectively applied to categorise case law based on the specific issues they address.


Reconstructing Human Mobility Pattern: A Semi-Supervised Approach for Cross-Dataset Transfer Learning

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Chris Stanford, Ph.D. Novateur Research Solutions 20110 Ashbrook Place, STE 170, Ashburn, VA 20147 cstanford@novateur.ai Submission Date: October 8, 2024 Liao, Liu, Kuai, Ma, He, Cao, Stanford, and Ma 3 ABSTRACT Understanding human mobility patterns is crucial for urban planning, transportation management, and public health. This study tackles two primary challenges in the field: the reliance on trajectory data, which often fails to capture the semantic interdependencies of activities, and the inherent incompleteness of real-world trajectory data. We have developed a model that reconstructs and learns human mobility patterns by focusing on semantic activity chains. We introduce a semisupervised iterative transfer learning algorithm to adapt models to diverse geographical contexts and address data scarcity. Our model is validated using comprehensive datasets from the United States, where it effectively reconstructs activity chains and generates high-quality synthetic mobility data, achieving a low Jensen-Shannon Divergence (JSD) value of 0.001, indicating a close similarity between synthetic and real data. Additionally, sparse GPS data from Egypt is used to evaluate the transfer learning algorithm, demonstrating successful adaptation of US mobility patterns to Egyptian contexts, achieving a 64% of increase in similarity, i.e., a JSD reduction from 0.09 to 0.03. This mobility reconstruction model and the associated transfer learning algorithm show significant potential for global human mobility modeling studies, enabling policymakers and researchers to design more effective and culturally tailored transportation solutions. Keywords: Human Mobility Patterns Modeling, Transfer Learning, Semi-Supervised Learning, Synthetic Mobility Data Liao, Liu, Kuai, Ma, He, Cao, Stanford, and Ma 4 INTRODUCTION Understanding human mobility patterns has become increasingly crucial in various fields, including urban planning, transportation management (1, 2), and public health (3). As urbanization accelerates and population mobility increases, the ability to accurately comprehend and predict human activity patterns has gained paramount importance. This knowledge not only aids in optimizing urban resource allocation but also provides essential insights for the development of smart cities.


Recycling Privileged Learning and Distribution Matching for Fairness

Neural Information Processing Systems

Equipping machine learning models with ethical and legal constraints is a serious issue; without this, the future of machine learning is at risk. This paper takes a step forward in this direction and focuses on ensuring machine learning models deliver fair decisions. In legal scholarships, the notion of fairness itself is evolving and multi-faceted. We set an overarching goal to develop a unified machine learning framework that is able to handle any definitions of fairness, their combinations, and also new definitions that might be stipulated in the future. To achieve our goal, we recycle two well-established machine learning techniques, privileged learning and distribution matching, and harmonize them for satisfying multi-faceted fairness definitions.