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Unravelling in Collaborative Learning

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

Abstract

Collaborative learning offers a promising avenue for leveraging decentralized data. However, collaboration in groups of strategic learners is not a given. In this work, we consider strategic agents who wish to train a model together but have sampling distributions of different quality. The collaboration is organized by a benevolent aggregator who gathers samples so as to maximize total welfare, but is unaware of data quality. This setting allows us to shed light on the deleterious effect of adverse selection in collaborative learning. More precisely, we demonstrate that when data quality indices are private, the coalition may undergo a phenomenon known as unravelling, wherein it shrinks up to the point that it becomes empty or solely comprised of the worst agent. We show how this issue can be addressed without making use of external transfers, by proposing a novel method inspired by probabilistic verification. This approach makes the grand coalition a Nash equilibrium with high probability despite information asymmetry, thereby breaking unravelling.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAdvances in Neural Information Processing Systems
Volume37
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2024
Event38th Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems, NeurIPS 2024 - Vancouver, Canada
Duration: 9 Dec 202415 Dec 2024

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