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Test Selection for Deep Learning Systems

Published 30 Apr 2019 in cs.LG, cs.SE, and stat.ML | (1904.13195v1)

Abstract: Testing of deep learning models is challenging due to the excessive number and complexity of computations involved. As a result, test data selection is performed manually and in an ad hoc way. This raises the question of how we can automatically select candidate test data to test deep learning models. Recent research has focused on adapting test selection metrics from code-based software testing (such as coverage) to deep learning. However, deep learning models have different attributes from code such as spread of computations across the entire network reflecting training data properties, balance of neuron weights and redundancy (use of many more neurons than needed). Such differences make code-based metrics inappropriate to select data that can challenge the models (can trigger misclassification). We thus propose a set of test selection metrics based on the notion of model uncertainty (model confidence on specific inputs). Intuitively, the more uncertain we are about a candidate sample, the more likely it is that this sample triggers a misclassification. Similarly, the samples for which we are the most uncertain, are the most informative and should be used to improve the model by retraining. We evaluate these metrics on two widely-used image classification problems involving real and artificial (adversarial) data. We show that uncertainty-based metrics have a strong ability to select data that are misclassified and lead to major improvement in classification accuracy during retraining: up to 80% more gain than random selection and other state-of-the-art metrics on one dataset and up to 29% on the other.

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