Sang Woo Kim

CV
h-index10
15papers
110citations
Novelty49%
AI Score31

15 Papers

LGFeb 13, 2023
How to Use Dropout Correctly on Residual Networks with Batch Normalization

Bum Jun Kim, Hyeyeon Choi, Hyeonah Jang et al.

For the stable optimization of deep neural networks, regularization methods such as dropout and batch normalization have been used in various tasks. Nevertheless, the correct position to apply dropout has rarely been discussed, and different positions have been employed depending on the practitioners. In this study, we investigate the correct position to apply dropout. We demonstrate that for a residual network with batch normalization, applying dropout at certain positions increases the performance, whereas applying dropout at other positions decreases the performance. Based on theoretical analysis, we provide the following guideline for the correct position to apply dropout: apply one dropout after the last batch normalization but before the last weight layer in the residual branch. We provide detailed theoretical explanations to support this claim and demonstrate them through module tests. In addition, we investigate the correct position of dropout in the head that produces the final prediction. Although the current consensus is to apply dropout after global average pooling, we prove that applying dropout before global average pooling leads to a more stable output. The proposed guidelines are validated through experiments using different datasets and models.

CVMay 15, 2022
Guidelines for the Regularization of Gammas in Batch Normalization for Deep Residual Networks

Bum Jun Kim, Hyeyeon Choi, Hyeonah Jang et al.

L2 regularization for weights in neural networks is widely used as a standard training trick. However, L2 regularization for gamma, a trainable parameter of batch normalization, remains an undiscussed mystery and is applied in different ways depending on the library and practitioner. In this paper, we study whether L2 regularization for gamma is valid. To explore this issue, we consider two approaches: 1) variance control to make the residual network behave like identity mapping and 2) stable optimization through the improvement of effective learning rate. Through two analyses, we specify the desirable and undesirable gamma to apply L2 regularization and propose four guidelines for managing them. In several experiments, we observed the increase and decrease in performance caused by applying L2 regularization to gamma of four categories, which is consistent with our four guidelines. Our proposed guidelines were validated through various tasks and architectures, including variants of residual networks and transformers.

CVJul 26, 2023
Resolution-Aware Design of Atrous Rates for Semantic Segmentation Networks

Bum Jun Kim, Hyeyeon Choi, Hyeonah Jang et al.

DeepLab is a widely used deep neural network for semantic segmentation, whose success is attributed to its parallel architecture called atrous spatial pyramid pooling (ASPP). ASPP uses multiple atrous convolutions with different atrous rates to extract both local and global information. However, fixed values of atrous rates are used for the ASPP module, which restricts the size of its field of view. In principle, atrous rate should be a hyperparameter to change the field of view size according to the target task or dataset. However, the manipulation of atrous rate is not governed by any guidelines. This study proposes practical guidelines for obtaining an optimal atrous rate. First, an effective receptive field for semantic segmentation is introduced to analyze the inner behavior of segmentation networks. We observed that the use of ASPP module yielded a specific pattern in the effective receptive field, which was traced to reveal the module's underlying mechanism. Accordingly, we derive practical guidelines for obtaining the optimal atrous rate, which should be controlled based on the size of input image. Compared to other values, using the optimal atrous rate consistently improved the segmentation results across multiple datasets, including the STARE, CHASE_DB1, HRF, Cityscapes, and iSAID datasets.

LGFeb 7, 2023
On the Ideal Number of Groups for Isometric Gradient Propagation

Bum Jun Kim, Hyeyeon Choi, Hyeonah Jang et al.

Recently, various normalization layers have been proposed to stabilize the training of deep neural networks. Among them, group normalization is a generalization of layer normalization and instance normalization by allowing a degree of freedom in the number of groups it uses. However, to determine the optimal number of groups, trial-and-error-based hyperparameter tuning is required, and such experiments are time-consuming. In this study, we discuss a reasonable method for setting the number of groups. First, we find that the number of groups influences the gradient behavior of the group normalization layer. Based on this observation, we derive the ideal number of groups, which calibrates the gradient scale to facilitate gradient descent optimization. Our proposed number of groups is theoretically grounded, architecture-aware, and can provide a proper value in a layer-wise manner for all layers. The proposed method exhibited improved performance over existing methods in numerous neural network architectures, tasks, and datasets.

LGSep 25, 2024
Stochastic Subsampling With Average Pooling

Bum Jun Kim, Sang Woo Kim

Regularization of deep neural networks has been an important issue to achieve higher generalization performance without overfitting problems. Although the popular method of Dropout provides a regularization effect, it causes inconsistent properties in the output, which may degrade the performance of deep neural networks. In this study, we propose a new module called stochastic average pooling, which incorporates Dropout-like stochasticity in pooling. We describe the properties of stochastic subsampling and average pooling and leverage them to design a module without any inconsistency problem. The stochastic average pooling achieves a regularization effect without any potential performance degradation due to the inconsistency issue and can easily be plugged into existing architectures of deep neural networks. Experiments demonstrate that replacing existing average pooling with stochastic average pooling yields consistent improvements across a variety of tasks, datasets, and models.

CVNov 7, 2023
Analysis of NaN Divergence in Training Monocular Depth Estimation Model

Bum Jun Kim, Hyeonah Jang, Sang Woo Kim

The latest advances in deep learning have facilitated the development of highly accurate monocular depth estimation models. However, when training a monocular depth estimation network, practitioners and researchers have observed not a number (NaN) loss, which disrupts gradient descent optimization. Although several practitioners have reported the stochastic and mysterious occurrence of NaN loss that bothers training, its root cause is not discussed in the literature. This study conducted an in-depth analysis of NaN loss during training a monocular depth estimation network and identified three types of vulnerabilities that cause NaN loss: 1) the use of square root loss, which leads to an unstable gradient; 2) the log-sigmoid function, which exhibits numerical stability issues; and 3) certain variance implementations, which yield incorrect computations. Furthermore, for each vulnerability, the occurrence of NaN loss was demonstrated and practical guidelines to prevent NaN loss were presented. Experiments showed that both optimization stability and performance on monocular depth estimation could be improved by following our guidelines.

LGMay 23, 2024
The Disappearance of Timestep Embedding in Modern Time-Dependent Neural Networks

Bum Jun Kim, Yoshinobu Kawahara, Sang Woo Kim

Dynamical systems are often time-varying, whose modeling requires a function that evolves with respect to time. Recent studies such as the neural ordinary differential equation proposed a time-dependent neural network, which provides a neural network varying with respect to time. However, we claim that the architectural choice to build a time-dependent neural network significantly affects its time-awareness but still lacks sufficient validation in its current states. In this study, we conduct an in-depth analysis of the architecture of modern time-dependent neural networks. Here, we report a vulnerability of vanishing timestep embedding, which disables the time-awareness of a time-dependent neural network. Furthermore, we find that this vulnerability can also be observed in diffusion models because they employ a similar architecture that incorporates timestep embedding to discriminate between different timesteps during a diffusion process. Our analysis provides a detailed description of this phenomenon as well as several solutions to address the root cause. Through experiments on neural ordinary differential equations and diffusion models, we observed that ensuring alive time-awareness via proposed solutions boosted their performance, which implies that their current implementations lack sufficient time-dependency.

CVMay 23, 2024
Configuring Data Augmentations to Reduce Variance Shift in Positional Embedding of Vision Transformers

Bum Jun Kim, Sang Woo Kim

Vision transformers (ViTs) have demonstrated remarkable performance in a variety of vision tasks. Despite their promising capabilities, training a ViT requires a large amount of diverse data. Several studies empirically found that using rich data augmentations, such as Mixup, Cutmix, and random erasing, is critical to the successful training of ViTs. Now, the use of rich data augmentations has become a standard practice in the current state. However, we report a vulnerability to this practice: Certain data augmentations such as Mixup cause a variance shift in the positional embedding of ViT, which has been a hidden factor that degrades the performance of ViT during the test phase. We claim that achieving a stable effect from positional embedding requires a specific condition on the image, which is often broken for the current data augmentation methods. We provide a detailed analysis of this problem as well as the correct configuration for these data augmentations to remove the side effects of variance shift. Experiments showed that adopting our guidelines improves the performance of ViTs compared with the current configuration of data augmentations.

LGJan 29, 2025
Temperature-Free Loss Function for Contrastive Learning

Bum Jun Kim, Sang Woo Kim

As one of the most promising methods in self-supervised learning, contrastive learning has achieved a series of breakthroughs across numerous fields. A predominant approach to implementing contrastive learning is applying InfoNCE loss: By capturing the similarities between pairs, InfoNCE loss enables learning the representation of data. Albeit its success, adopting InfoNCE loss requires tuning a temperature, which is a core hyperparameter for calibrating similarity scores. Despite its significance and sensitivity to performance being emphasized by several studies, searching for a valid temperature requires extensive trial-and-error-based experiments, which increases the difficulty of adopting InfoNCE loss. To address this difficulty, we propose a novel method to deploy InfoNCE loss without temperature. Specifically, we replace temperature scaling with the inverse hyperbolic tangent function, resulting in a modified InfoNCE loss. In addition to hyperparameter-free deployment, we observed that the proposed method even yielded a performance gain in contrastive learning. Our detailed theoretical analysis discovers that the current practice of temperature scaling in InfoNCE loss causes serious problems in gradient descent, whereas our method provides desirable gradient properties. The proposed method was validated on five benchmarks on contrastive learning, yielding satisfactory results without temperature tuning.

CVFeb 2, 2024
Scale Equalization for Multi-Level Feature Fusion

Bum Jun Kim, Sang Woo Kim

Deep neural networks have exhibited remarkable performance in a variety of computer vision fields, especially in semantic segmentation tasks. Their success is often attributed to multi-level feature fusion, which enables them to understand both global and local information from an image. However, we found that multi-level features from parallel branches are on different scales. The scale disequilibrium is a universal and unwanted flaw that leads to detrimental gradient descent, thereby degrading performance in semantic segmentation. We discover that scale disequilibrium is caused by bilinear upsampling, which is supported by both theoretical and empirical evidence. Based on this observation, we propose injecting scale equalizers to achieve scale equilibrium across multi-level features after bilinear upsampling. Our proposed scale equalizers are easy to implement, applicable to any architecture, hyperparameter-free, implementable without requiring extra computational cost, and guarantee scale equilibrium for any dataset. Experiments showed that adopting scale equalizers consistently improved the mIoU index across various target datasets, including ADE20K, PASCAL VOC 2012, and Cityscapes, as well as various decoder choices, including UPerHead, PSPHead, ASPPHead, SepASPPHead, and FCNHead.

CVMay 8, 2023
Understanding Gaussian Attention Bias of Vision Transformers Using Effective Receptive Fields

Bum Jun Kim, Hyeyeon Choi, Hyeonah Jang et al.

Vision transformers (ViTs) that model an image as a sequence of partitioned patches have shown notable performance in diverse vision tasks. Because partitioning patches eliminates the image structure, to reflect the order of patches, ViTs utilize an explicit component called positional embedding. However, we claim that the use of positional embedding does not simply guarantee the order-awareness of ViT. To support this claim, we analyze the actual behavior of ViTs using an effective receptive field. We demonstrate that during training, ViT acquires an understanding of patch order from the positional embedding that is trained to be a specific pattern. Based on this observation, we propose explicitly adding a Gaussian attention bias that guides the positional embedding to have the corresponding pattern from the beginning of training. We evaluated the influence of Gaussian attention bias on the performance of ViTs in several image classification, object detection, and semantic segmentation experiments. The results showed that proposed method not only facilitates ViTs to understand images but also boosts their performance on various datasets, including ImageNet, COCO 2017, and ADE20K.

CVNov 16, 2021
Improved Robustness of Vision Transformer via PreLayerNorm in Patch Embedding

Bum Jun Kim, Hyeyeon Choi, Hyeonah Jang et al.

Vision transformers (ViTs) have recently demonstrated state-of-the-art performance in a variety of vision tasks, replacing convolutional neural networks (CNNs). Meanwhile, since ViT has a different architecture than CNN, it may behave differently. To investigate the reliability of ViT, this paper studies the behavior and robustness of ViT. We compared the robustness of CNN and ViT by assuming various image corruptions that may appear in practical vision tasks. We confirmed that for most image transformations, ViT showed robustness comparable to CNN or more improved. However, for contrast enhancement, severe performance degradations were consistently observed in ViT. From a detailed analysis, we identified a potential problem: positional embedding in ViT's patch embedding could work improperly when the color scale changes. Here we claim the use of PreLayerNorm, a modified patch embedding structure to ensure scale-invariant behavior of ViT. ViT with PreLayerNorm showed improved robustness in various corruptions including contrast-varying environments.

CVAug 31, 2021
Dead Pixel Test Using Effective Receptive Field

Bum Jun Kim, Hyeyeon Choi, Hyeonah Jang et al.

Deep neural networks have been used in various fields, but their internal behavior is not well known. In this study, we discuss two counterintuitive behaviors of convolutional neural networks (CNNs). First, we evaluated the size of the receptive field. Previous studies have attempted to increase or control the size of the receptive field. However, we observed that the size of the receptive field does not describe the classification accuracy. The size of the receptive field would be inappropriate for representing superiority in performance because it reflects only depth or kernel size and does not reflect other factors such as width or cardinality. Second, using the effective receptive field, we examined the pixels contributing to the output. Intuitively, each pixel is expected to equally contribute to the final output. However, we found that there exist pixels in a partially dead state with little contribution to the output. We reveal that the reason for this lies in the architecture of CNN and discuss solutions to reduce the phenomenon. Interestingly, for general classification tasks, the existence of dead pixels improves the training of CNNs. However, in a task that captures small perturbation, dead pixels degrade the performance. Therefore, the existence of these dead pixels should be understood and considered in practical applications of CNN.

CVJan 15, 2020
Extending Class Activation Mapping Using Gaussian Receptive Field

Bum Jun Kim, Gyogwon Koo, Hyeyeon Choi et al.

This paper addresses the visualization task of deep learning models. To improve Class Activation Mapping (CAM) based visualization method, we offer two options. First, we propose Gaussian upsampling, an improved upsampling method that can reflect the characteristics of deep learning models. Second, we identify and modify unnatural terms in the mathematical derivation of the existing CAM studies. Based on two options, we propose Extended-CAM, an advanced CAM-based visualization method, which exhibits improved theoretical properties. Experimental results show that Extended-CAM provides more accurate visualization than the existing methods.

CVOct 9, 2018
Selective Distillation of Weakly Annotated GTD for Vision-based Slab Identification System

Sang Jun Lee, Sang Woo Kim, Wookyong Kwon et al.

This paper proposes an algorithm for recognizing slab identification numbers in factory scenes. In the development of a deep-learning based system, manual labeling to make ground truth data (GTD) is an important but expensive task. Furthermore, the quality of GTD is closely related to the performance of a supervised learning algorithm. To reduce manual work in the labeling process, we generated weakly annotated GTD by marking only character centroids. Whereas bounding-boxes for characters require at least a drag-and-drop operation or two clicks to annotate a character location, the weakly annotated GTD requires a single click to record a character location. The main contribution of this paper is on selective distillation to improve the quality of the weakly annotated GTD. Because manual GTD are usually generated by many people, it may contain personal bias or human error. To address this problem, the information in manual GTD is integrated and refined by selective distillation. In the process of selective distillation, a fully convolutional network is trained using the weakly annotated GTD, and its prediction maps are selectively used to revise locations and boundaries of semantic regions of characters in the initial GTD. The modified GTD are used in the main training stage, and a post-processing is conducted to retrieve text information. Experiments were thoroughly conducted on actual industry data collected at a steelmaking factory to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method.