Quantifying uncertainty is important for actionable predictions in real-world
applications. A crucial part of predictive uncertainty quantification is the
estimation of epistemic uncertainty, which is defined as an integral of the
product between a divergence function and the posterior. Current methods such
as Deep Ensembles or MC dropout underperform at estimating the epistemic
uncertainty, since they primarily consider the posterior when sampling models.
We suggest Quantification of Uncertainty with Adversarial Models (QUAM) to
better estimate the epistemic uncertainty. QUAM identifies regions where the
whole product under the integral is large, not just the posterior.
Consequently, QUAM has lower approximation error of the epistemic uncertainty
compared to previous methods. Models for which the product is large correspond
to adversarial models (not adversarial examples!). Adversarial models have both
a high posterior as well as a high divergence between their predictions and
that of a reference model. Our experiments show that QUAM excels in capturing
epistemic uncertainty for deep learning models and outperforms previous methods
on challenging tasks in the vision domain