English

The Mythos of Model Interpretability

Machine Learning 2017-03-07 v3 Artificial Intelligence Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Neural and Evolutionary Computing Machine Learning

Abstract

Supervised machine learning models boast remarkable predictive capabilities. But can you trust your model? Will it work in deployment? What else can it tell you about the world? We want models to be not only good, but interpretable. And yet the task of interpretation appears underspecified. Papers provide diverse and sometimes non-overlapping motivations for interpretability, and offer myriad notions of what attributes render models interpretable. Despite this ambiguity, many papers proclaim interpretability axiomatically, absent further explanation. In this paper, we seek to refine the discourse on interpretability. First, we examine the motivations underlying interest in interpretability, finding them to be diverse and occasionally discordant. Then, we address model properties and techniques thought to confer interpretability, identifying transparency to humans and post-hoc explanations as competing notions. Throughout, we discuss the feasibility and desirability of different notions, and question the oft-made assertions that linear models are interpretable and that deep neural networks are not.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1606.03490,
  title  = {The Mythos of Model Interpretability},
  author = {Zachary C. Lipton},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1606.03490},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

presented at 2016 ICML Workshop on Human Interpretability in Machine Learning (WHI 2016), New York, NY

R2 v1 2026-06-22T14:22:54.769Z