Towards Distribution-Shift Uncertainty Estimation for Inverse Problems with Generative Priors
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2510.10947v1
- Date: Mon, 13 Oct 2025 02:58:26 GMT
- Title: Towards Distribution-Shift Uncertainty Estimation for Inverse Problems with Generative Priors
- Authors: Namhoon Kim, Sara Fridovich-Keil,
- Abstract summary: Gene models have shown strong potential as data-driven priors for solving inverse problems.<n>We propose an instance-level, calibration-free uncertainty indicator that is sensitive to distribution shift.<n>Our proposed indicator is efficiently computable for any computational imaging inverse problem.
- Score: 4.085626952545055
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: Generative models have shown strong potential as data-driven priors for solving inverse problems such as reconstructing medical images from undersampled measurements. While these priors improve reconstruction quality with fewer measurements, they risk hallucinating features when test images lie outside the training distribution. Existing uncertainty quantification methods in this setting (i) require an in-distribution calibration dataset, which may not be available, (ii) provide heuristic rather than statistical estimates, or (iii) quantify uncertainty from model capacity or limited measurements rather than distribution shift. We propose an instance-level, calibration-free uncertainty indicator that is sensitive to distribution shift, requires no knowledge of the training distribution, and incurs no retraining cost. Our key hypothesis is that reconstructions of in-distribution images remain stable under random measurement variations, while reconstructions of out-of-distribution (OOD) images exhibit greater instability. We use this stability as a proxy for detecting distribution shift. Our proposed OOD indicator is efficiently computable for any computational imaging inverse problem; we demonstrate it on tomographic reconstruction of MNIST digits, where a learned proximal network trained only on digit "0" is evaluated on all ten digits. Reconstructions of OOD digits show higher variability and correspondingly higher reconstruction error, validating this indicator. These results suggest a deployment strategy that pairs generative priors with lightweight guardrails, enabling aggressive measurement reduction for in-distribution cases while automatically warning when priors are applied out of distribution.
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