The 99% accuracy club
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30958Dato
2021Type
Conference objectKonferansebidrag
Forfatter
Møllersen, KajsaSammendrag
Melanoma Classification - a 10,000$ competition. For the 2020 Melanoma Classification competition hosted by kaggle, 33,126 images were made available for training (of which 2% were melanomas), and an additional 10,982 were used for final ranking of the 3,308 teams who entered the competition with eyes on the 10,000$ prize. The task was simple: provide a probability for melanoma (deadly skin cancer) for each image. The ranking was based on the area under the ROC curve (AUC). Up until the deadline, contestants could submit their training results for an intermediate ranking.
And the prize goes to... A team of three kaggle grandmasters ran away with the first prize with an AUC of 0.9490. Their intermediate ranking was 881st - not even in the top 25%. The dynamics between intermediate and final ranking is easily explained by overfitting - the real enigma is how come computer scientists seemingly never learn.