Paper ID: 2204.00492
Provable concept learning for interpretable predictions using variational autoencoders
Armeen Taeb, Nicolo Ruggeri, Carina Schnuck, Fanny Yang
In safety-critical applications, practitioners are reluctant to trust neural networks when no interpretable explanations are available. Many attempts to provide such explanations revolve around pixel-based attributions or use previously known concepts. In this paper we aim to provide explanations by provably identifying \emph{high-level, previously unknown ground-truth concepts}. To this end, we propose a probabilistic modeling framework to derive (C)oncept (L)earning and (P)rediction (CLAP) -- a VAE-based classifier that uses visually interpretable concepts as predictors for a simple classifier. Assuming a generative model for the ground-truth concepts, we prove that CLAP is able to identify them while attaining optimal classification accuracy. Our experiments on synthetic datasets verify that CLAP identifies distinct ground-truth concepts on synthetic datasets and yields promising results on the medical Chest X-Ray dataset.
Submitted: Apr 1, 2022