From Predictive Algorithms to Automatic Generation of Anomalies

Fiche du document

Date

15 avril 2024

Type de document
Périmètre
Identifiant
  • 2404.10111
Collection

arXiv

Organisation

Cornell University



Sujets proches En

Algorism

Citer ce document

Sendhil Mullainathan et al., « From Predictive Algorithms to Automatic Generation of Anomalies », arXiv - économie


Partage / Export

Résumé 0

Machine learning algorithms can find predictive signals that researchers fail to notice; yet they are notoriously hard-to-interpret. How can we extract theoretical insights from these black boxes? History provides a clue. Facing a similar problem -- how to extract theoretical insights from their intuitions -- researchers often turned to ``anomalies:'' constructed examples that highlight flaws in an existing theory and spur the development of new ones. Canonical examples include the Allais paradox and the Kahneman-Tversky choice experiments for expected utility theory. We suggest anomalies can extract theoretical insights from black box predictive algorithms. We develop procedures to automatically generate anomalies for an existing theory when given a predictive algorithm. We cast anomaly generation as an adversarial game between a theory and a falsifier, the solutions to which are anomalies: instances where the black box algorithm predicts - were we to collect data - we would likely observe violations of the theory. As an illustration, we generate anomalies for expected utility theory using a large, publicly available dataset on real lottery choices. Based on an estimated neural network that predicts lottery choices, our procedures recover known anomalies and discover new ones for expected utility theory. In incentivized experiments, subjects violate expected utility theory on these algorithmically generated anomalies; moreover, the violation rates are similar to observed rates for the Allais paradox and Common ratio effect.

document thumbnail

Par les mêmes auteurs

Sur les mêmes sujets

Sur les mêmes disciplines

Exporter en