Rodrigue Siry

LG
3papers
7citations
Novelty53%
AI Score22

3 Papers

LGNov 3, 2021
A Meta-Learned Neuron model for Continual Learning

Rodrigue Siry

Continual learning is the ability to acquire new knowledge without forgetting the previously learned one, assuming no further access to past training data. Neural network approximators trained with gradient descent are known to fail in this setting as they must learn from a stream of data-points sampled from a stationary distribution to converge. In this work, we replace the standard neuron by a meta-learned neuron model whom inference and update rules are optimized to minimize catastrophic interference. Our approach can memorize dataset-length sequences of training samples, and its learning capabilities generalize to any domain. Unlike previous continual learning methods, our method does not make any assumption about how tasks are constructed, delivered and how they relate to each other: it simply absorbs and retains training samples one by one, whether the stream of input data is time-correlated or not.

LGSep 16, 2021
On the inductive biases of deep domain adaptation

Rodrigue Siry, Louis Hémadou, Loïc Simon et al.

Domain alignment is currently the most prevalent solution to unsupervised domain-adaptation tasks and are often being presented as minimizers of some theoretical upper-bounds on risk in the target domain. However, further works revealed severe inadequacies between theory and practice: we consolidate this analysis and confirm that imposing domain invariance on features is neither necessary nor sufficient to obtain low target risk. We instead argue that successful deep domain adaptation rely largely on hidden inductive biases found in the common practice, such as model pre-training or design of encoder architecture. We perform various ablation experiments on popular benchmarks and our own synthetic transfers to illustrate their role in prototypical situations. To conclude our analysis, we propose to meta-learn parametric inductive biases to solve specific transfers and show their superior performance over handcrafted heuristics.

LGJun 21, 2020
On the Theoretical Equivalence of Several Trade-Off Curves Assessing Statistical Proximity

Rodrigue Siry, Ryan Webster, Loic Simon et al.

The recent advent of powerful generative models has triggered the renewed development of quantitative measures to assess the proximity of two probability distributions. As the scalar Frechet inception distance remains popular, several methods have explored computing entire curves, which reveal the trade-off between the fidelity and variability of the first distribution with respect to the second one. Several of such variants have been proposed independently and while intuitively similar, their relationship has not yet been made explicit. In an effort to make the emerging picture of generative evaluation more clear, we propose a unification of four curves known respectively as: the precision-recall (PR) curve, the Lorenz curve, the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve and a special case of Rényi divergence frontiers. In addition, we discuss possible links between PR / Lorenz curves with the derivation of domain adaptation bounds.