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Adam R. Klivans

Adam R. Klivans contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Equivalence of Coarse and Fine-Grained Models for Learning with Distribution Shift

Recent work on provably efficient algorithms for learning with distribution shift has focused on two models: PQ learning (Goldwasser et al. (2020)) and TDS learning (Klivans et al. (2024)). Algorithms for TDS learning are allowed to reject a test set entirely if distribution shift is detected. In contrast, PQ learners may only reject points that are deemed out-of-distribution on an individual basis. Our main result is a surprising equivalence between these two models in the distribution-free setting. In particular, we give an efficient black-box reduction from PQ learning to TDS learning for any Boolean concept class. This equivalence implies the first hardness results for distribution-free TDS learning of basic classes such as halfspaces. The main technical contribution underlying our equivalence is a method for boosting, via branching programs, the weak distinguishing power of TDS learners that have rejected the target domain. We also show that giving a learner access to membership queries sidesteps these hardness results and allows for efficient, distribution-free PQ learnability of halfspaces. Our algorithm iteratively recovers large-margin separators obtained by applying successive Forster transforms on the training data.

preprint2026arXiv

Iterative Chow Filtering for Learning with Distribution Shift

Recent work due to Goel et al. gave the first efficient algorithms for learning with distribution shift in the challenging PQ framework. In this setting, a learner receives labeled training examples, unlabeled test examples, and must make correct predictions on the test set but is allowed to abstain from predicting on out-of-distribution points. Their results rely on ${\cal L}_2$ sandwiching approximations, a strong requirement that leads to poor bounds for several basic function classes such as DNF formulas. Here, we show that the weaker notion of ${\cal L}_1$ sandwiching suffices for efficient PQ learning. As a consequence, we obtain the first quasipolynomial-time PQ learning algorithm for DNFs under the uniform distribution and essentially match the guarantees known for ordinary PAC learning. More broadly, our bounds provide exponential improvements for several classes including constant depth circuits and constant degree polynomial threshold functions. Our main technical ingredient is Iterative Chow Filtering, a new procedure that uses low-degree Chow parameters to identify and remove test points incompatible with the training distribution.

preprint2026arXiv

The Power of Iterative Filtering for Supervised Learning with (Heavy) Contamination

Inspired by recent work on learning with distribution shift, we give a general outlier removal algorithm called iterative polynomial filtering and show a number of striking applications for supervised learning with contamination: (1) We show that any function class that can be approximated by low-degree polynomials with respect to a hypercontractive distribution can be efficiently learned under bounded contamination (also known as nasty noise). This is a surprising resolution to a longstanding gap between the complexity of agnostic learning and learning with contamination, as it was widely believed that low-degree approximators only implied tolerance to label noise. In particular, it implies the first efficient algorithm for learning halfspaces with $η$-bounded contamination up to error $2η+ε$ with respect to the Gaussian distribution. (2) For any function class that admits the (stronger) notion of sandwiching approximators, we obtain near-optimal learning guarantees even with respect to heavy additive contamination, where far more than $1/2$ of the training set may be added adversarially. Prior related work held only for regression and in a list-decodable setting. (3) We obtain the first efficient algorithms for tolerant testable learning of functions of halfspaces with respect to any fixed log-concave distribution. Even the non-tolerant case for a single halfspace in this setting had remained open. These results significantly advance our understanding of efficient supervised learning under contamination, a setting that has been much less studied than its unsupervised counterpart.