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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 326338 of 338 papers

TitleStatusHype
Epistemology of Modeling and Simulation: How can we gain Knowledge from Simulations?0
Equitability, interval estimation, and statistical power0
Equivalence of distance-based and RKHS-based statistics in hypothesis testing0
Exact Post Model Selection Inference for Marginal Screening0
Extracting relations between outcomes and significance levels in Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs) publications0
Fast and Memory-Efficient Significant Pattern Mining via Permutation Testing0
From Shannon's Channel to Semantic Channel via New Bayes' Formulas for Machine Learning0
Smooth p-Wasserstein Distance: Structure, Empirical Approximation, and Statistical Applications0
From Two Sample Testing to Singular Gaussian Discrimination0
Fundamental Limits of Testing the Independence of Irrelevant Alternatives in Discrete Choice0
General Framework for Binary Classification on Top Samples0
Generalization Error Bounds via mth Central Moments of the Information Density0
Generalized Binary Search For Split-Neighborly Problems0
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Benchmark Results

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