66.9SYMay 28
Robustness Enhancement of Consensus Networks: the Optimal Memory DepthJiamin Wang, Jian Liu, Feng Xiao et al.
Understanding what governs collective robustness and how it can be enhanced remains a central pursuit in network science. This paper investigates the robustness of multi-agent consensus networks, quantified by the $H_2$ performance metric, and delves into the enhancing effect of agents' local memory on it. Inspired by the hierarchical temporal structure of memory observed in neuroscience, we focus on the role of memory depth, which reflects the temporal features of memory from recent to remote. Building on linear extrapolation, we propose a consensus protocol with single-step memory and tunable memory depth, derive the necessary and sufficient condition for achieving consensus, and show that the protocol exhibits an inheritable consensus property across memory depths. Furthermore, analytical expressions for the $H_2$ performance metric, which depend on the memory factor, memory depth, coupling gain, and Laplacian spectrum, are established. Under balanced usage of real-time and memory information, we demonstrate that memory at any accessible depth enhances $H_2$ performance, and the optimal memory depth occurs at either the most recent or the most remote memory, contingent upon certain parameter regions. Further detailed discussions are provided to clarify the broader implications of our findings.
64.4CVMar 26
Knowledge-Guided Adversarial Training for Infrared Object Detection via Thermal Radiation ModelingShiji Zhao, Shukun Xiong, Maoxun Yuan et al.
In complex environments, infrared object detection exhibits broad applicability and stability across diverse scenarios. However, infrared object detection is vulnerable to both common corruptions and adversarial examples, leading to potential security risks. To improve the robustness of infrared object detection, current methods mostly adopt a data-driven ideology, which only superficially drives the network to fit the training data without specifically considering the unique characteristics of infrared images, resulting in limited robustness. In this paper, we revisit infrared physical knowledge and find that relative thermal radiation relations between different classes can be regarded as a reliable knowledge source under the complex scenarios of adversarial examples and common corruptions. Thus, we theoretically model thermal radiation relations based on the rank order of gray values for different classes, and further quantify the stability of various inter-class thermal radiation relations. Based on the above theoretical framework, we propose Knowledge-Guided Adversarial Training (KGAT) for infrared object detection, in which infrared physical knowledge is embedded into the adversarial training process, and the predicted results are optimized to be consistent with the actual physical laws. Extensive experiments on three infrared datasets and six mainstream infrared object detection models demonstrate that KGAT effectively enhances both clean accuracy and robustness against adversarial attacks and common corruptions.