Vidya Prasad

CV
h-index21
4papers
12citations
Novelty54%
AI Score28

4 Papers

AIJul 17, 2024
Beyond the Veil of Similarity: Quantifying Semantic Continuity in Explainable AI

Qi Huang, Emanuele Mezzi, Osman Mutlu et al.

We introduce a novel metric for measuring semantic continuity in Explainable AI methods and machine learning models. We posit that for models to be truly interpretable and trustworthy, similar inputs should yield similar explanations, reflecting a consistent semantic understanding. By leveraging XAI techniques, we assess semantic continuity in the task of image recognition. We conduct experiments to observe how incremental changes in input affect the explanations provided by different XAI methods. Through this approach, we aim to evaluate the models' capability to generalize and abstract semantic concepts accurately and to evaluate different XAI methods in correctly capturing the model behaviour. This paper contributes to the broader discourse on AI interpretability by proposing a quantitative measure for semantic continuity for XAI methods, offering insights into the models' and explainers' internal reasoning processes, and promoting more reliable and transparent AI systems.

CVDec 17, 2023
Unraveling the Temporal Dynamics of the Unet in Diffusion Models

Vidya Prasad, Chen Zhu-Tian, Anna Vilanova et al.

Diffusion models have garnered significant attention since they can effectively learn complex multivariate Gaussian distributions, resulting in diverse, high-quality outcomes. They introduce Gaussian noise into training data and reconstruct the original data iteratively. Central to this iterative process is a single Unet, adapting across time steps to facilitate generation. Recent work revealed the presence of composition and denoising phases in this generation process, raising questions about the Unets' varying roles. Our study dives into the dynamic behavior of Unets within denoising diffusion probabilistic models (DDPM), focusing on (de)convolutional blocks and skip connections across time steps. We propose an analytical method to systematically assess the impact of time steps and core Unet components on the final output. This method eliminates components to study causal relations and investigate their influence on output changes. The main purpose is to understand the temporal dynamics and identify potential shortcuts during inference. Our findings provide valuable insights into the various generation phases during inference and shed light on the Unets' usage patterns across these phases. Leveraging these insights, we identify redundancies in GLIDE (an improved DDPM) and improve inference time by ~27% with minimal degradation in output quality. Our ultimate goal is to guide more informed optimization strategies for inference and influence new model designs.

LGDec 17, 2024
Progressive Monitoring of Generative Model Training Evolution

Vidya Prasad, Anna Vilanova, Nicola Pezzotti

While deep generative models (DGMs) have gained popularity, their susceptibility to biases and other inefficiencies that lead to undesirable outcomes remains an issue. With their growing complexity, there is a critical need for early detection of issues to achieve desired results and optimize resources. Hence, we introduce a progressive analysis framework to monitor the training process of DGMs. Our method utilizes dimensionality reduction techniques to facilitate the inspection of latent representations, the generated and real distributions, and their evolution across training iterations. This monitoring allows us to pause and fix the training method if the representations or distributions progress undesirably. This approach allows for the analysis of a models' training dynamics and the timely identification of biases and failures, minimizing computational loads. We demonstrate how our method supports identifying and mitigating biases early in training a Generative Adversarial Network (GAN) and improving the quality of the generated data distribution.

CVJun 25, 2024
EvolvED: Evolutionary Embeddings to Understand the Generation Process of Diffusion Models

Vidya Prasad, Hans van Gorp, Christina Humer et al.

Diffusion models, widely used in image generation, rely on iterative refinement to generate images from noise. Understanding this data evolution is important for model development and interpretability, yet challenging due to its high-dimensional, iterative nature. Prior works often focus on static or instance-level analyses, missing the iterative and holistic aspects of the generative path. While dimensionality reduction can visualize image evolution for few instances, it does preserve the iterative structure. To address these gaps, we introduce EvolvED, a method that presents a holistic view of the iterative generative process in diffusion models. EvolvED goes beyond instance exploration by leveraging predefined research questions to streamline generative space exploration. Tailored prompts aligned with these questions are used to extract intermediate images, preserving iterative context. Targeted feature extractors trace the evolution of key image attribute evolution, addressing the complexity of high-dimensional outputs. Central to EvolvED is a novel evolutionary embedding algorithm that encodes iterative steps while maintaining semantic relations. It enhances the visualization of data evolution by clustering semantically similar elements within each iteration with t-SNE, grouping elements by iteration, and aligning an instance's elements across iterations. We present rectilinear and radial layouts to represent iterations and support exploration. We apply EvolvED to diffusion models like GLIDE and Stable Diffusion, demonstrating its ability to provide valuable insights into the generative process.