Jelle Keizer

2papers

2 Papers

LGSep 12, 2022
Active Learning and Novel Model Calibration Measurements for Automated Visual Inspection in Manufacturing

Jože M. Rožanec, Luka Bizjak, Elena Trajkova et al.

Quality control is a crucial activity performed by manufacturing enterprises to ensure that their products meet quality standards and avoid potential damage to the brand's reputation. The decreased cost of sensors and connectivity enabled increasing digitalization of manufacturing. In addition, artificial intelligence enables higher degrees of automation, reducing overall costs and time required for defect inspection. This research compares three active learning approaches, having single and multiple oracles, to visual inspection. Six new metrics are proposed to assess the quality of calibration without the need for ground truth. Furthermore, this research explores whether existing calibrators can improve their performance by leveraging an approximate ground truth to enlarge the calibration set. The experiments were performed on real-world data provided by Philips Consumer Lifestyle BV. Our results show that the explored active learning settings can reduce the data labeling effort by between three and four percent without detriment to the overall quality goals, considering a threshold of p=0.95. Furthermore, the results show that the proposed calibration metrics successfully capture relevant information otherwise available to metrics used up to date only through ground truth data. Therefore, the proposed metrics can be used to estimate the quality of models' probability calibration without committing to a labeling effort to obtain ground truth data.

LGSep 28, 2022
Machine Beats Machine: Machine Learning Models to Defend Against Adversarial Attacks

Jože M. Rožanec, Dimitrios Papamartzivanos, Entso Veliou et al.

We propose using a two-layered deployment of machine learning models to prevent adversarial attacks. The first layer determines whether the data was tampered, while the second layer solves a domain-specific problem. We explore three sets of features and three dataset variations to train machine learning models. Our results show clustering algorithms achieved promising results. In particular, we consider the best results were obtained by applying the DBSCAN algorithm to the structured structural similarity index measure computed between the images and a white reference image.