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ICML 2025

Towards Robustness and Explainability of Automatic Algorithm Selection

Conference Paper Accept (spotlight poster) Artificial Intelligence ยท Machine Learning

Abstract

Algorithm selection aims to identify the optimal performing algorithm before execution. Existing techniques typically focus on the observed correlations between algorithm performance and meta-features. However, little research has explored the underlying mechanisms of algorithm selection, specifically what characteristics an algorithm must possess to effectively tackle problems with certain feature values. This gap not only limits the explainability but also makes existing models vulnerable to data bias and distribution shift. This paper introduces directed acyclic graph (DAG) to describe this mechanism, proposing a novel modeling paradigm that aligns more closely with the fundamental logic of algorithm selection. By leveraging DAG to characterize the algorithm feature distribution conditioned on problem features, our approach enhances robustness against marginal distribution changes and allows for finer-grained predictions through the reconstruction of optimal algorithm features, with the final decision relying on differences between reconstructed and rejected algorithm features. Furthermore, we demonstrate that, the learned DAG and the proposed counterfactual calculations offer our approach with both model-level and instance-level explainability.

Authors

Keywords

  • algorithm selection
  • algorithm feature
  • AutoML
  • causal learning
  • causality
  • directed acyclic graph

Context

Venue
International Conference on Machine Learning
Archive span
1993-2025
Indexed papers
16471
Paper id
276232613527609526