English

Do We Really Even Need Data?

Methodology 2024-02-06 v2 Machine Learning

Abstract

As artificial intelligence and machine learning tools become more accessible, and scientists face new obstacles to data collection (e.g. rising costs, declining survey response rates), researchers increasingly use predictions from pre-trained algorithms as outcome variables. Though appealing for financial and logistical reasons, using standard tools for inference can misrepresent the association between independent variables and the outcome of interest when the true, unobserved outcome is replaced by a predicted value. In this paper, we characterize the statistical challenges inherent to this so-called ``inference with predicted data'' problem and elucidate three potential sources of error: (i) the relationship between predicted outcomes and their true, unobserved counterparts, (ii) robustness of the machine learning model to resampling or uncertainty about the training data, and (iii) appropriately propagating not just bias but also uncertainty from predictions into the ultimate inference procedure.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2401.08702,
  title  = {Do We Really Even Need Data?},
  author = {Kentaro Hoffman and Stephen Salerno and Awan Afiaz and Jeffrey T. Leek and Tyler H. McCormick},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2401.08702},
  year   = {2024}
}