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A Study on the Predictability of Sample Learning Consistency

Curriculum Learning is a powerful training method that allows for faster and better training in some settings. This method, however, requires having a notion of which examples are difficult and which are easy, which is not always trivial to provide. A recent metric called C-Score acts as a proxy for example difficulty by relating it to learning consistency. Unfortunately, this method is quite compute intensive which limits its applicability for alternative datasets. In this work, we train models through different methods to predict C-Score for CIFAR-100 and CIFAR-10. We find, however, that these models generalize poorly both within the same distribution as well as out of distribution. This suggests that C-Score is not defined by the individual characteristics of each sample but rather by other factors. We hypothesize that a sample's relation to its neighbours, in particular, how many of them share the same labels, can help in explaining C-Scores. We plan to explore this in future work.

preprint2022arXivOpen access
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