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Reliable Predictive Inference

An important factor to guarantee a responsible use of data-driven recommendation systems is that we should be able to communicate their uncertainty to decision makers. This can be accomplished by constructing prediction intervals, which provide an intuitive measure of the limits of predictive performance.

This package contains a Python implementation of Conformalized quantile regression (CQR) [1] methodology for constructing marginal distribusion-free prediction intervals. It also implements the equalized coverage framework [2] that builds valid group-conditional prediction intervals.

Conformalized Quantile Regression [1]

CQR is a technique for constructing prediction intervals that attain valid coverage in finite samples, without making distributional assumptions. It combines the statistical efficiency of quantile regression with the distribution-free coverage guarantee of conformal prediction. On one hand, CQR is flexible in that it can wrap around any algorithm for quantile regression, including random forests and deep neural networks. On the other hand, a key strength of CQR is its rigorous control of the miscoverage rate, independent of the underlying regression algorithm.

[1] Yaniv Romano, Evan Patterson, and Emmanuel J. Candes, “Conformalized quantile regression.” 2019.

Equalized Coverage [2]

To support equitable treatment, the equalized coverage methodology forces the construction of the prediction intervals to be unbiased in the sense that their coverage must be equal across all protected groups of interest. Similar to CQR and conformal inference, equalized coverage offers rigorous distribution-free guarantees that hold in finite samples. This methodology can also be viewed as a wrapper around any predictive algorithm.

[2] Y. Romano, R. F. Barber, C. Sabbatti and E. J. Candès, “With malice towards none: Assessing uncertainty via equalized coverage.” 2019.

Getting Started

This package is self-contained and implemented in python.

Part of the code is a taken from the nonconformist package available at https://github.com/donlnz/nonconformist. One may refer to the nonconformist repository to view other applications of conformal prediction.

Prerequisites

Installing

The development version is available here on github:

git clone https://github.com/yromano/cqr.git

Usage

CQR

Please refer to cqr_real_data_example.ipynb for basic usage. Comparisons to competitive methods and additional usage examples of this package can be found in cqr_synthetic_data_example_1.ipynb and cqr_synthetic_data_example_2.ipynb.

Equalized Coverage

The notebook detect_prediction_bias_example.ipynb performs simple data analysis for MEPS 21 data set and detects bias in the prediction. The notebook equalized_coverage_example.ipynb illustrates how to run the methods proposed in [2] and construct prediction intervals with equal coverage across groups.

Reproducible Research

The code available under /reproducible_experiments/ in the repository replicates the experimental results in [1] and [2].

Publicly Available Datasets

Data subject to copyright/usage rules

The Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MPES) data can be downloaded using the code in the folder /get_meps_data/ under this repository. It is based on this explanation (code provided by IBM's AIF360).

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.