Question 156 of 506
Monitoring ML solutionshardMultiple ChoiceObjective-mapped

Quick Answer

The correct monitoring strategy is to monitor the distribution of the model's predicted probabilities and compare them to the empirical failure rate over time. This approach directly addresses a sudden recall drop with stable precision because it reveals whether the model’s confidence calibration has shifted—a classic sign of concept drift or a change in the underlying failure rate that misaligns the decision threshold. On the Google Professional Machine Learning Engineer exam, this scenario tests your ability to distinguish between performance metric monitoring and distribution monitoring; a common trap is to focus on retraining frequency or feature drift alone, which misses the threshold misalignment. The key insight is that recall drops when the model becomes overconfident in the negative class, so tracking probability distributions against actual outcomes catches that calibration drift. Memory tip: when precision holds but recall falls, think “threshold tilt”—the cutoff needs recalibration, not the model.

PMLE Monitoring ML solutions Practice Question

This PMLE practice question tests your understanding of monitoring ml solutions. Read the scenario carefully and evaluate each option against the stated constraints before committing to an answer. After answering, compare your reasoning against the explanation and wrong-answer breakdown below. Once you have made your selection, read the full explanation to reinforce the concept and understand why each distractor is designed to mislead on exam day.

You have a model that predicts equipment failure. The model is retrained every week with new data. You notice that the model's precision is stable but recall drops suddenly. Which monitoring strategy would best help you understand the cause?

Clue words in this question

Noticing these words before you look at the options changes how you read each choice.

  • Clue: "best"

    Why it matters: Signals that multiple options may be partially correct. Choose the option that most directly solves the exact problem described, not the one that sounds most complete.

Question 1hardmultiple choice
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Answer choices

Why each option matters

Answer the question above first, then reveal the full breakdown to understand why each option is right or wrong.

Correct answer & explanation

Monitor the distribution of the model's predicted probabilities and compare to the empirical failure rate over time.

Option B is correct because a drop in recall (more false negatives) while precision stays stable suggests the model's decision threshold may be misaligned with the current data distribution. Monitoring the distribution of predicted probabilities against the empirical failure rate over time directly reveals if the model's confidence calibration has shifted, indicating concept drift or a change in the underlying failure rate that requires threshold recalibration.

Key principle: Answer the scenario, not the keyword: identify the specific constraint before choosing the most familiar-sounding option.

Answer analysis

Option-by-option breakdown

For each option: why learners choose it and why it is or isn't the right answer here.

  • Monitor feature drift for all input features.

    Why it's wrong here

    Feature drift could explain, but recall drop specifically points to concept drift.

  • Monitor the distribution of the model's predicted probabilities and compare to the empirical failure rate over time.

    Why this is correct

    This helps detect concept drift: if predicted probabilities shift relative to actual outcomes, recall may drop.

    Clue confirmation

    The clue word "best" in the question point toward this answer.

    Related concept

    Read the scenario before looking for a memorised answer.

  • Compare the number of predictions per day with previous weeks.

    Why it's wrong here

    Volume doesn't explain recall drop.

  • Check the request latency at the endpoint.

    Why it's wrong here

    Latency unrelated.

Common exam traps

Common exam trap: answer the scenario, not the keyword

Google Cloud often tests the distinction between data drift (feature drift) and concept drift (label/prior shift), and the trap here is that candidates assume any performance degradation must be due to feature drift, ignoring that a stable precision with dropping recall specifically signals a threshold or label distribution issue best diagnosed via probability calibration monitoring.

Detailed technical explanation

How to think about this question

Recall drops often occur when the model's probability threshold is fixed but the class prior (failure rate) changes, causing the model to under-predict the minority class. By plotting the distribution of predicted probabilities (e.g., using a reliability diagram) and comparing it to the empirical failure rate, you can detect miscalibration—if the model outputs probabilities that are too low for actual failures, recall suffers. In production, this is a classic sign of prior probability shift (a type of concept drift) that requires threshold adjustment or retraining with reweighted data.

KKey Concepts to Remember

  • Read the scenario before looking for a memorised answer.
  • Find the constraint that changes the correct option.
  • Eliminate answers that are true in general but not in this case.

TExam Day Tips

  • Watch for words such as best, first, most likely and least administrative effort.
  • Review why wrong options are wrong, not only why the correct option is correct.

Key takeaway

Answer the scenario, not the keyword: identify the specific constraint before choosing the most familiar-sounding option.

Real-world example

How this comes up in practice

A cloud solutions architect for a retail company is evaluating services for a new workload. The correct answer here reflects best practice for the specific scenario described — not a general cloud recommendation. Answer the scenario, not the keyword: identify the specific constraint before choosing the most familiar-sounding option. Cloud exam questions reward reading the constraint carefully: the same technology can be right or wrong depending on the use case.

What to study next

Got this wrong? Here's your next step.

Identify which exam domain this question belongs to, review the core concept, then practise similar questions from the same domain.

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FAQ

Questions learners often ask

What does this PMLE question test?

Monitoring ML solutions — This question tests Monitoring ML solutions — Read the scenario before looking for a memorised answer..

What is the correct answer to this question?

The correct answer is: Monitor the distribution of the model's predicted probabilities and compare to the empirical failure rate over time. — Option B is correct because a drop in recall (more false negatives) while precision stays stable suggests the model's decision threshold may be misaligned with the current data distribution. Monitoring the distribution of predicted probabilities against the empirical failure rate over time directly reveals if the model's confidence calibration has shifted, indicating concept drift or a change in the underlying failure rate that requires threshold recalibration.

What should I do if I get this PMLE question wrong?

Identify which exam domain this question belongs to, review the core concept, then practise similar questions from the same domain.

Are there clue words in this question I should notice?

Yes — watch for: "best". Signals that multiple options may be partially correct. Choose the option that most directly solves the exact problem described, not the one that sounds most complete.

What is the key concept behind this question?

Read the scenario before looking for a memorised answer.

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Last reviewed: Jun 30, 2026

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