SOTAVerified

Two-sample testing

In statistical hypothesis testing, a two-sample test is a test performed on the data of two random samples, each independently obtained from a different given population. The purpose of the test is to determine whether the difference between these two populations is statistically significant. The statistics used in two-sample tests can be used to solve many machine learning problems, such as domain adaptation, covariate shift and generative adversarial networks.

Papers

Showing 131140 of 338 papers

TitleStatusHype
Early Detection of Long Term Evaluation Criteria in Online Controlled Experiments0
Bayesian hypothesis testing for one bit compressed sensing with sensing matrix perturbation0
Distributed Information-Theoretic Clustering0
Distributed Hypothesis Testing and Social Learning in Finite Time with a Finite Amount of Communication0
Bayesian Hypothesis Testing for Block Sparse Signal Recovery0
A New Approach to Distributed Hypothesis Testing and Non-Bayesian Learning: Improved Learning Rate and Byzantine-Resilience0
Distributed Chernoff Test: Optimal decision systems over networks0
Distance Assessment and Hypothesis Testing of High-Dimensional Samples using Variational Autoencoders0
Discovering Potential Correlations via Hypercontractivity0
Dimension-agnostic inference using cross U-statistics0
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Benchmark Results

#ModelMetricClaimedVerifiedStatus
1MMD-DAvg accuracy98.5Unverified
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1MMD-DAvg accuracy74.4Unverified
#ModelMetricClaimedVerifiedStatus
1MMD-DAvg accuracy65.9Unverified
#ModelMetricClaimedVerifiedStatus
1MMD-DAvg accuracy57.9Unverified
#ModelMetricClaimedVerifiedStatus
1MMD-DAvg accuracy91Unverified