English

Evaluating and Boosting Uncertainty Quantification in Classification

Machine Learning 2019-09-17 v2 Artificial Intelligence

Abstract

Emergence of artificial intelligence techniques in biomedical applications urges the researchers to pay more attention on the uncertainty quantification (UQ) in machine-assisted medical decision making. For classification tasks, prior studies on UQ are difficult to compare with each other, due to the lack of a unified quantitative evaluation metric. Considering that well-performing UQ models ought to know when the classification models act incorrectly, we design a new evaluation metric, area under Confidence-Classification Characteristic curves (AUCCC), to quantitatively evaluate the performance of the UQ models. AUCCC is threshold-free, robust to perturbation, and insensitive to the classification performance. We evaluate several UQ methods (e.g., max softmax output) with AUCCC to validate its effectiveness. Furthermore, a simple scheme, named Uncertainty Distillation (UDist), is developed to boost the UQ performance, where a confidence model is distilling the confidence estimated by deep ensembles. The proposed method is easy to implement; it consistently outperforms strong baselines on natural and medical image datasets in our experiments.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1909.06030,
  title  = {Evaluating and Boosting Uncertainty Quantification in Classification},
  author = {Xiaoyang Huang and Jiancheng Yang and Linguo Li and Haoran Deng and Bingbing Ni and Yi Xu},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1909.06030},
  year   = {2019}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-23T11:14:12.029Z