## Week 2 Quiz - Autonomous driving (case study) 1. You are just getting started on this project. What is the first thing you do? Assume each of the steps below would take about an equal amount of time (a few days). - Spend a few days training a basic model and see what mistakes it makes. > As discussed in lecture, applied ML is a highly iterative process. If you train a basic model and carry out error analysis (see what mistakes it makes) it will help point you in more promising directions. 2. Your goal is to detect road signs (stop sign, pedestrian crossing sign, construction ahead sign) and traffic signals (red and green lights) in images. The goal is to recognize which of these objects appear in each image. You plan to use a deep neural network with ReLU units in the hidden layers. For the output layer, a softmax activation would be a good choice for the output layer because this is a multi-task learning problem. True/False? - [ ] True - [x] False > Softmax would be a good choice if one and only one of the possibilities (stop sign, speed bump, pedestrian crossing, green light and red light) was present in each image. 3. You are carrying out error analysis and counting up what errors the algorithm makes. Which of these datasets do you think you should manually go through and carefully examine, one image at a time? - [ ] 10,000 randomly chosen images - [ ] 500 randomly chosen images - [x] 500 images on which the algorithm made a mistake - [ ] 10,000 images on which the algorithm made a mistake > Focus on images that the algorithm got wrong. Also, 500 is enough to give you a good initial sense of the error statistics. There’s probably no need to look at 10,000, which will take a long time. 4. After working on the data for several weeks, your team ends up with the following data: - 100,000 labeled images taken using the front-facing camera of your car. - 900,000 labeled images of roads downloaded from the internet. Each image’s labels precisely indicate the presence of any specific road signs and traffic signals or combinations of them. For example, y(i) = [1 0 0 1 0] means the image contains a stop sign and a red traffic light. Because this is a multi-task learning problem, you need to have all your y(i) vectors fully labeled. If one example is equal to [0 ? 1 1 ?] then the learning algorithm will not be able to use that example. True/False? - [ ] True - [x] False > As seen in the lecture on multi-task learning, you can compute the cost such that it is not influenced by the fact that some entries haven’t been labeled. 5. The distribution of data you care about contains images from your car’s front-facing camera; which comes from a different distribution than the images you were able to find and download off the internet. How should you split the dataset into train/dev/test sets? - [ ] Mix all the 100,000 images with the 900,000 images you found online. Shuffle everything. Split the 1,000,000 images dataset into 600,000 for the training set, 200,000 for the dev set and 200,000 for the test set. - [ ] Mix all the 100,000 images with the 900,000 images you found online. Shuffle everything. Split the 1,000,000 images dataset into 980,000 for the training set, 10,000 for the dev set and 10,000 for the test set. - [x] Choose the training set to be the 900,000 images from the internet along with 80,000 images from your car’s front-facing camera. The 20,000 remaining images will be split equally in dev and test sets. - [ ] Choose the training set to be the 900,000 images from the internet along with 20,000 images from your car’s front-facing camera. The 80,000 remaining images will be split equally in dev and test sets. > As seen in lecture, it is important that your dev and test set have the closest possible distribution to “real”-data. It is also important for the training set to contain enough “real”-data to avoid having a data-mismatch problem. 6. Assume you’ve finally chosen the following split between of the data: - Training 940,000 images randomly picked from (900,000 internet images + 60,000 car’s front-facing camera images) 8.8% - Training-Dev 20,000 images randomly picked from (900,000 internet images + 60,000 car’s front-facing camera images) 9.1% - Dev 20,000 images from your car’s front-facing camera 14.3% - Test 20,000 images from the car’s front-facing camera 14.8% You also know that human-level error on the road sign and traffic signals classification task is around 0.5%. Which of the following are True? (Check all that apply). - You have a large avoidable-bias problem because your training error is quite a bit higher than the human-level error. - You have a large data-mismatch problem because your model does a lot better on the training-dev set than on the dev set. 7. Based on table from the previous question, a friend thinks that the training data distribution is much easier than the dev/test distribution. What do you think? - There’s insufficient information to tell if your friend is right or wrong. > The algorithm does better on the distribution of data it trained on. But you don’t know if it’s because it trained on that no distribution or if it really is easier. To get a better sense, measure human-level error separately on both distributions. 8. You decide to focus on the dev set and check by hand what are the errors due to. Here is a table summarizing your discoveries: - Overall dev set error 14.3% - Errors due to incorrectly labeled data 4.1% - Errors due to foggy pictures 8.0% - Errors due to rain drops stuck on your car’s front-facing camera 2.2% - Errors due to other causes 1.0% In this table, 4.1%, 8.0%, etc.are a fraction of the total dev set (not just examples your algorithm mislabeled). I.e. about 8.0/14.3 = 56% of your errors are due to foggy pictures. The results from this analysis implies that the team’s highest priority should be to bring more foggy pictures into the training set so as to address the 8.0% of errors in that category. True/False? - [x] False because it depends on how easy it is to add foggy data. If foggy data is very hard and costly to collect, it might not be worth the team’s effort. (OR) - [x] False because this would depend on how easy it is to add this data and how much you think your team thinks it’ll help. - [ ] True because it is the largest category of errors. As discussed in lecture, we should prioritize the largest category of error to avoid wasting the team’s time. - [ ] True because it is greater than the other error categories added together (8.0 > 4.1+2.2+1.0). - [ ] False because data augmentation (synthesizing foggy images by clean/non-foggy images) is more efficient. 9. You can buy a specially designed windshield wiper that help wipe off some of the raindrops on the front-facing camera. Based on the table from the previous question, which of the following statements do you agree with? - 2.2% would be a reasonable estimate of the maximum amount this windshield wiper could improve performance. > You will probably not improve performance by more than 2.2% by solving the raindrops problem. If your dataset was infinitely big, 2.2% would be a perfect estimate of the improvement you can achieve by purchasing a specially designed windshield wiper that removes the raindrops. 10. You decide to use data augmentation to address foggy images. You find 1,000 pictures of fog off the internet, and “add” them to clean images to synthesize foggy days, like this: Which of the following statements do you agree with? (Check all that apply.) - So long as the synthesized fog looks realistic to the human eye, you can be confident that the synthesized data is accurately capturing the distribution of real foggy images, since human vision is very accurate for the problem you’re solving. > If the synthesized images look realistic, then the model will just see them as if you had added useful data to identify road signs and traffic signals in a foggy weather. I will very likely help. 11. After working further on the problem, you’ve decided to correct the incorrectly labeled data on the dev set. Which of these statements do you agree with? (Check all that apply). - You do not necessarily need to fix the incorrectly labeled data in the training set, because it's okay for the training set distribution to differ from the dev and test sets. Note that it is important that the dev set and test set have the same distribution OR - You should not correct incorrectly labeled data in the training set as well so as to avoid your training set now being even more different from your dev set. > Deep learning algorithms are quite robust to having slightly different train and dev distributions. - You should also correct the incorrectly labeled data in the test set, so that the dev and test sets continue to come from the same distribution > Because you want to make sure that your dev and test data come from the same distribution for your algorithm to make your team’s iterative development process is efficient. 12. So far your algorithm only recognizes red and green traffic lights. One of your colleagues in the startup is starting to work on recognizing a yellow traffic light. (Some countries call it an orange light rather than a yellow light; we’ll use the US convention of calling it yellow.) Images containing yellow lights are quite rare, and she doesn’t have enough data to build a good model. She hopes you can help her out using transfer learning. What do you tell your colleague? - She should try using weights pre-trained on your dataset, and fine-tuning further with the yellow-light dataset. > You have trained your model on a huge dataset, and she has a small dataset. Although your labels are different, the parameters of your model have been trained to recognize many characteristics of road and traffic images which will be useful for her problem. This is a perfect case for transfer learning, she can start with a model with the same architecture as yours, change what is after the last hidden layer and initialize it with your trained parameters. 13. Another colleague wants to use microphones placed outside the car to better hear if there’re other vehicles around you. For example, if there is a police vehicle behind you, you would be able to hear their siren. However, they don’t have much to train this audio system. How can you help? - Neither transfer learning nor multi-task learning seems promising. > The problem he is trying to solve is quite different from yours. The different dataset structures make it probably impossible to use transfer learning or multi-task learning. 14. To recognize red and green lights, you have been using this approach: - (A) Input an image (x) to a neural network and have it directly learn a mapping to make a prediction as to whether there’s a red light and/or green light (y). A teammate proposes a different, two-step approach: - (B) In this two-step approach, you would first (i) detect the traffic light in the image (if any), then (ii) determine the color of the illuminated lamp in the traffic light. Between these two, Approach B is more of an end-to-end approach because it has distinct steps for the input end and the output end. True/False? - [ ] True - [x] False > (A) is an end-to-end approach as it maps directly the input (x) to the output (y). 15. Approach A (in the question above) tends to be more promising than approach B if you have a ________ (fill in the blank). - [x] Large training set - [ ] Multi-task learning problem. - [ ] Large bias problem. - [ ] Problem with a high Bayes error. > In many fields, it has been observed that end-to-end learning works better in practice, but requires a large amount of data.