Researcher profile

Bret Nestor

Bret Nestor contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

A Statistical Framework for Algorithmic Collective Action with Multiple Collectives

As learning systems increasingly shape everyday decisions, Algorithmic Collective Action (ACA), i.e., users coordinating changes to shared data to steer model behavior, offers a complement to regulator-side policy and corporate model design. Real-world collective actions have traditionally been decentralized and fragmented into multiple collectives, despite sharing overarching objectives, with each collective differing in size, strategy, and actionable goals. However, most of the ACA literature focuses on single collective settings. To address this, we propose the first comprehensive statistical framework for ACA with multiple collectives acting on the same system. In particular, we focus on collective action in classification, studying how multiple collectives can influence a classifier's behavior. We provide quantitative statistical bounds on the success of the collectives, considering the role and the interplay of the collectives' sizes and the alignment of their goals. We make such bounds computable by each collective with only partial knowledge of other collectives' sizes and strategies. Finally, we numerically illustrate our framework on simulations inspired by interventions for climate adaptation in smart cities, demonstrating the usefulness of our bounds.

preprint2020arXiv

A Comprehensive Evaluation of Multi-task Learning and Multi-task Pre-training on EHR Time-series Data

Multi-task learning (MTL) is a machine learning technique aiming to improve model performance by leveraging information across many tasks. It has been used extensively on various data modalities, including electronic health record (EHR) data. However, despite significant use on EHR data, there has been little systematic investigation of the utility of MTL across the diverse set of possible tasks and training schemes of interest in healthcare. In this work, we examine MTL across a battery of tasks on EHR time-series data. We find that while MTL does suffer from common negative transfer, we can realize significant gains via MTL pre-training combined with single-task fine-tuning. We demonstrate that these gains can be achieved in a task-independent manner and offer not only minor improvements under traditional learning, but also notable gains in a few-shot learning context, thereby suggesting this could be a scalable vehicle to offer improved performance in important healthcare contexts.