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Label Noise: Ignorance Is Bliss

Learning under multi-class label noise is framed as domain adaptation using the concept of relative signal strength, validating the Noise Ignorant Empirical Risk Minimization principle and achieving top performance on CIFAR-N.

Year
2024
Venue
arXiv 2024
Authors
4
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arxiv.org/abs/2411.00079ARXIV-DEFAULT
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Abstract

We establish a new theoretical framework for learning under multi-class, instance-dependent label noise. This framework casts learning with label noise as a form of domain adaptation, in particular, domain adaptation under posterior drift. We introduce the concept of \emph{relative signal strength} (RSS), a pointwise measure that quantifies the transferability from noisy to clean posterior. Using RSS, we establish nearly matching upper and lower bounds on the excess risk. Our theoretical findings support the simple \emph{Noise Ignorant Empirical Risk Minimization (NI-ERM)} principle, which minimizes empirical risk while ignoring label noise. Finally, we translate this theoretical insight into practice: by using NI-ERM to fit a linear classifier on top of a self-supervised feature extractor, we achieve state-of-the-art performance on the CIFAR-N data challenge.

Authors

4