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Mon 03/18
Andrew Ilyas headshot

Seminar @ Cornell Tech: CS Candidate, Andrew Ilyas

Making machine learning predictably reliable

Despite ML models’ impressive performance, training and deploying them is currently a somewhat messy endeavor. But does it have to be? In this talk, Andrew Ilyas overviews his work on making ML “predictably reliable” — enabling developers to know when their models will work, when they will fail, and why.

To begin, Ilyas uses a case study of adversarial inputs to show that human intuition can be a poor predictor of how ML models operate. Motivated by this, Ilyas presents a line of work that aims to develop a precise understanding of the ML pipeline, combining statistical tools with large-scale experiments to characterize the role of each individual design choice: from how to collect data, to what dataset to train on, to what learning algorithm to use.

Speaker Bio

Andrew Ilyas is a PhD student in Computer Science at MIT, where he is advised by Aleksander Madry and Constantinos Daskalakis. His research aims to improve the reliability and predictability of machine learning systems. He was previously supported by an Open Philanthropy AI Fellowship.