Jorge da Silva Goncalves

2papers

2 Papers

LGJul 8, 2024
Structured Generations: Using Hierarchical Clusters to guide Diffusion Models

Jorge da Silva Goncalves, Laura Manduchi, Moritz Vandenhirtz et al.

This paper introduces Diffuse-TreeVAE, a deep generative model that integrates hierarchical clustering into the framework of Denoising Diffusion Probabilistic Models (DDPMs). The proposed approach generates new images by sampling from a root embedding of a learned latent tree VAE-based structure, it then propagates through hierarchical paths, and utilizes a second-stage DDPM to refine and generate distinct, high-quality images for each data cluster. The result is a model that not only improves image clarity but also ensures that the generated samples are representative of their respective clusters, addressing the limitations of previous VAE-based methods and advancing the state of clustering-based generative modeling.

84.8LGMar 16
Rethinking Machine Unlearning: Models Designed to Forget via Key Deletion

Sonia Laguna, Jorge da Silva Goncalves, Moritz Vandenhirtz et al.

Machine unlearning is rapidly becoming a practical requirement, driven by privacy regulations, data errors, and the need to remove harmful or corrupted training samples. Despite this, most existing methods tackle the problem purely from a post-hoc perspective. They attempt to erase the influence of targeted training samples through parameter updates that typically require access to the full training data. This creates a mismatch with real deployment scenarios where unlearning requests can be anticipated, revealing a fundamental limitation of post-hoc approaches. We propose \textit{unlearning by design}, a novel paradigm in which models are directly trained to support forgetting as an inherent capability. We instantiate this idea with Machine UNlearning via KEY deletion (MUNKEY), a memory augmented transformer that decouples instance-specific memorization from model weights. Here, unlearning corresponds to removing the instance-identifying key, enabling direct zero-shot forgetting without weight updates or access to the original samples or labels. Across natural image benchmarks, fine-grained recognition, and medical datasets, MUNKEY outperforms all post-hoc baselines. Our results establish that unlearning by design enables fast, deployment-oriented unlearning while preserving predictive performance.