首页|When Something Looks Too Good To Be True, It Usually Is! AI Is Causing A Credibility Crisis In Networking
When Something Looks Too Good To Be True, It Usually Is! AI Is Causing A Credibility Crisis In Networking
扫码查看
点击上方二维码区域,可以放大扫码查看
原文链接
NETL
NSTL
The purpose of this editorial note is to raise awareness about a deeply concerning and yet much-overlooked development in the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML) for solving problems in science in general and in networking in particular. To put it simply, in today's age of AI/ML, the much-publicized and well-documented “reproducibility crisis” in science is further compounded by an inconspicuous and rarely mentioned “credibility crisis.” More to the point, by focusing on the area of networking research, we provide evidence that among the already small number of reproducible scientific publications that describe AI/ML-based solutions, even fewer, and often none, describe trained AI/ML models that are “credible;” that is, can be trusted to not only perform well in their original training domain but also in new and untested environments. We elaborate on the root cause of this credibility crisis, discuss why the credibility of AI/ML models is of paramount importance for their successful use in practice, and put forward an aggressive but imminently practical proposal for addressing this crisis head-on so as to pave the way for a future where networking research can reap the full benefits of AI/ML.
Computer NetworksArtificial IntelligenceMachine LearningExplainable AICredible AI Models
Walter Willinger、Ronaldo A. Ferreira、Arpit Gupta、Roman (Sylee) Beltiukov、Satyandra Guthula、Lisandro Z. Granville、Arthur S. Jacobs