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 5160 of 338 papers

TitleStatusHype
Smooth p-Wasserstein Distance: Structure, Empirical Approximation, and Statistical Applications0
Quickest change detection for multi-task problems under unknown parameters0
Understanding Classifiers with Generative Models0
A General Framework for Distributed Inference with Uncertain Models0
Policy design in experiments with unknown interference0
Adversarially Robust Classification based on GLRT0
Bottleneck Problems: Information and Estimation-Theoretic View0
Dimension-agnostic inference using cross U-statistics0
Estimating Linear Mixed Effects Models with Truncated Normally Distributed Random Effects0
Robust hypothesis testing and distribution estimation in Hellinger distance0
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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