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ICML 2023

Learning Functional Distributions with Private Labels

Conference Paper Accepted Paper Artificial Intelligence ยท Machine Learning

Abstract

We study the problem of learning functional distributions in the presence of noise. A functional is a map from the space of features to distributions over a set of labels, and is often assumed to belong to a known class of hypotheses $\mathcal{F}$. Features are generated by a general random process and labels are sampled independently from feature-dependent distributions. In privacy sensitive applications, labels are passed through a noisy kernel. We consider online learning, where at each time step, a predictor attempts to predict the actual (label) distribution given only the features and noisy labels in prior steps. The performance of the predictor is measured by the expected KL-risk that compares the predicted distributions to the underlying truth. We show that the minimax expected KL-risk is of order $\tilde{\Theta}(\sqrt{T\log|\mathcal{F}|})$ for finite hypothesis class $\mathcal{F}$ and any non-trivial noise level. We then extend this result to general infinite classes via the concept of stochastic sequential covering and provide matching lower and upper bounds for a wide range of natural classes.

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Context

Venue
International Conference on Machine Learning
Archive span
1993-2025
Indexed papers
16471
Paper id
152024607601103421