Does the Definition of Difficulty Matter? Scoring Functions and their Role for Curriculum Learning
Simon Rampp, Manuel Milling, Andreas Triantafyllopoulos, Bj\"orn W., Schuller

TL;DR
This study investigates how the definition of difficulty affects curriculum learning in deep models, analyzing scoring functions' robustness, their impact on training, and how different strategies can complement each other.
Contribution
It provides an extensive analysis of scoring functions for difficulty estimation, their robustness, and the effects of curriculum learning strategies across different tasks and settings.
Findings
Scoring functions are highly dependent on training randomness and can be stabilized with ensemble methods.
Curriculum learning's effectiveness varies; the data presentation order significantly influences performance.
Different curriculum strategies can complement each other, improving model accuracy through late fusion.
Abstract
Curriculum learning (CL) describes a machine learning training strategy in which samples are gradually introduced into the training process based on their difficulty. Despite a partially contradictory body of evidence in the literature, CL finds popularity in deep learning research due to its promise of leveraging human-inspired curricula to achieve higher model performance. Yet, the subjectivity and biases that follow any necessary definition of difficulty, especially for those found in orderings derived from models or training statistics, have rarely been investigated. To shed more light on the underlying unanswered questions, we conduct an extensive study on the robustness and similarity of the most common scoring functions for sample difficulty estimation, as well as their potential benefits in CL, using the popular benchmark dataset CIFAR-10 and the acoustic scene classification…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEducation and Critical Thinking Development
