Indel Pal Singh

2papers

2 Papers

CVJan 25, 2023Code
Discriminator-free Unsupervised Domain Adaptation for Multi-label Image Classification

Indel Pal Singh, Enjie Ghorbel, Anis Kacem et al.

In this paper, a discriminator-free adversarial-based Unsupervised Domain Adaptation (UDA) for Multi-Label Image Classification (MLIC) referred to as DDA-MLIC is proposed. Recently, some attempts have been made for introducing adversarial-based UDA methods in the context of MLIC. However, these methods which rely on an additional discriminator subnet present one major shortcoming. The learning of domain-invariant features may harm their task-specific discriminative power, since the classification and discrimination tasks are decoupled. Herein, we propose to overcome this issue by introducing a novel adversarial critic that is directly deduced from the task-specific classifier. Specifically, a two-component Gaussian Mixture Model (GMM) is fitted on the source and target predictions in order to distinguish between two clusters. This allows extracting a Gaussian distribution for each component. The resulting Gaussian distributions are then used for formulating an adversarial loss based on a Frechet distance. The proposed method is evaluated on several multi-label image datasets covering three different types of domain shift. The obtained results demonstrate that DDA-MLIC outperforms existing state-of-the-art methods in terms of precision while requiring a lower number of parameters. The code is publicly available at github.com/cvi2snt/DDA-MLIC.

CVJan 11, 2023
Multi-label Image Classification using Adaptive Graph Convolutional Networks: from a Single Domain to Multiple Domains

Indel Pal Singh, Enjie Ghorbel, Oyebade Oyedotun et al.

This paper proposes an adaptive graph-based approach for multi-label image classification. Graph-based methods have been largely exploited in the field of multi-label classification, given their ability to model label correlations. Specifically, their effectiveness has been proven not only when considering a single domain but also when taking into account multiple domains. However, the topology of the used graph is not optimal as it is pre-defined heuristically. In addition, consecutive Graph Convolutional Network (GCN) aggregations tend to destroy the feature similarity. To overcome these issues, an architecture for learning the graph connectivity in an end-to-end fashion is introduced. This is done by integrating an attention-based mechanism and a similarity-preserving strategy. The proposed framework is then extended to multiple domains using an adversarial training scheme. Numerous experiments are reported on well-known single-domain and multi-domain benchmarks. The results demonstrate that our approach achieves competitive results in terms of mean Average Precision (mAP) and model size as compared to the state-of-the-art. The code will be made publicly available.