Statistically Optimal Uncertainty Quantification for Expensive Black-Box Models
Uncertainty quantification, by means of confidence interval (CI) construction, has been a fundamental problem in statistics and also important in risk-aware decision-making. In this paper, we revisit the basic problem of CI construction, but in the setting of expensive black-box models. This means w...
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Zusammenfassung: | Uncertainty quantification, by means of confidence interval (CI)
construction, has been a fundamental problem in statistics and also important
in risk-aware decision-making. In this paper, we revisit the basic problem of
CI construction, but in the setting of expensive black-box models. This means
we are confined to using a low number of model runs, and without the ability to
obtain auxiliary model information such as gradients. In this case, there exist
classical methods based on data splitting, and newer methods based on suitable
resampling. However, while all these resulting CIs have similarly accurate
coverage in large sample, their efficiencies in terms of interval length
differ, and a systematic understanding of which method and configuration
attains the shortest interval appears open. Motivated by this, we create a
theoretical framework to study the statistical optimality on CI tightness under
computation constraint. Our theory shows that standard batching, but also
carefully constructed new formulas using uneven-size or overlapping batches,
batched jackknife, and the so-called cheap bootstrap and its weighted
generalizations, are statistically optimal. Our developments build on a new
bridge of the classical notion of uniformly most accurate unbiasedness with
batching and resampling, by viewing model runs as asymptotically Gaussian
"data", as well as a suitable notion of homogeneity for CIs. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2408.05887 |