CVJan 30Code
Cross-Domain Few-Shot Learning for Hyperspectral Image Classification Based on Mixup Foundation ModelNaeem Paeedeh, Mahardhika Pratama, Ary Shiddiqi et al.
Although cross-domain few-shot learning (CDFSL) for hyper-spectral image (HSI) classification has attracted significant research interest, existing works often rely on an unrealistic data augmentation procedure in the form of external noise to enlarge the sample size, thus greatly simplifying the issue of data scarcity. They involve a large number of parameters for model updates, being prone to the overfitting problem. To the best of our knowledge, none has explored the strength of the foundation model, having strong generalization power to be quickly adapted to downstream tasks. This paper proposes the MIxup FOundation MOdel (MIFOMO) for CDFSL of HSI classifications. MIFOMO is built upon the concept of a remote sensing (RS) foundation model, pre-trained across a large scale of RS problems, thus featuring generalizable features. The notion of coalescent projection (CP) is introduced to quickly adapt the foundation model to downstream tasks while freezing the backbone network. The concept of mixup domain adaptation (MDM) is proposed to address the extreme domain discrepancy problem. Last but not least, the label smoothing concept is implemented to cope with noisy pseudo-label problems. Our rigorous experiments demonstrate the advantage of MIFOMO, where it beats prior arts with up to 14% margin. The source code of MIFOMO is open-sourced in https://github.com/Naeem- Paeedeh/MIFOMO for reproducibility and convenient further study.
CVJul 21, 2025Code
Cross-Domain Few-Shot Learning with Coalescent Projections and Latent Space ReservationNaeem Paeedeh, Mahardhika Pratama, Imam Mustafa Kamal et al.
Despite the progress in cross-domain few-shot learning, a model pre-trained with DINO combined with a prototypical classifier outperforms the latest SOTA methods. A crucial limitation that needs to be overcome is that updating too many parameters of the transformers leads to overfitting due to the scarcity of labeled samples. To address this challenge, we propose a new concept, coalescent projection, as an effective successor to soft prompts. Additionally, we propose a novel pseudo-class generation method, combined with self-supervised transformations, that relies solely on the base domain to prepare the network to encounter unseen samples from different domains. The proposed method exhibits its effectiveness in comprehensive experiments on the extreme domain-shift problem of the BSCD-FSL benchmark. Our code is published at \href{https://github.com/Naeem-Paeedeh/CPLSR}{https://github.com/Naeem-Paeedeh/CPLSR}.
LGMay 8, 2024
Few-Shot Class Incremental Learning via Robust Transformer ApproachNaeem Paeedeh, Mahardhika Pratama, Sunu Wibirama et al.
Few-Shot Class-Incremental Learning presents an extension of the Class Incremental Learning problem where a model is faced with the problem of data scarcity while addressing the catastrophic forgetting problem. This problem remains an open problem because all recent works are built upon the convolutional neural networks performing sub-optimally compared to the transformer approaches. Our paper presents Robust Transformer Approach built upon the Compact Convolution Transformer. The issue of overfitting due to few samples is overcome with the notion of the stochastic classifier, where the classifier's weights are sampled from a distribution with mean and variance vectors, thus increasing the likelihood of correct classifications, and the batch-norm layer to stabilize the training process. The issue of CF is dealt with the idea of delta parameters, small task-specific trainable parameters while keeping the backbone networks frozen. A non-parametric approach is developed to infer the delta parameters for the model's predictions. The prototype rectification approach is applied to avoid biased prototype calculations due to the issue of data scarcity. The advantage of ROBUSTA is demonstrated through a series of experiments in the benchmark problems where it is capable of outperforming prior arts with big margins without any data augmentation protocols.
LGOct 17, 2025
Continual Knowledge Consolidation LORA for Domain Incremental LearningNaeem Paeedeh, Mahardhika Pratama, Weiping Ding et al.
Domain Incremental Learning (DIL) is a continual learning sub-branch that aims to address never-ending arrivals of new domains without catastrophic forgetting problems. Despite the advent of parameter-efficient fine-tuning (PEFT) approaches, existing works create task-specific LoRAs overlooking shared knowledge across tasks. Inaccurate selection of task-specific LORAs during inference results in significant drops in accuracy, while existing works rely on linear or prototype-based classifiers, which have suboptimal generalization powers. Our paper proposes continual knowledge consolidation low rank adaptation (CONEC-LoRA) addressing the DIL problems. CONEC-LoRA is developed from consolidations between task-shared LORA to extract common knowledge and task-specific LORA to embrace domain-specific knowledge. Unlike existing approaches, CONEC-LoRA integrates the concept of a stochastic classifier whose parameters are sampled from a distribution, thus enhancing the likelihood of correct classifications. Last but not least, an auxiliary network is deployed to optimally predict the task-specific LoRAs for inferences and implements the concept of a different-depth network structure in which every layer is connected with a local classifier to take advantage of intermediate representations. This module integrates the ball-generator loss and transformation module to address the synthetic sample bias problem. Our rigorous experiments demonstrate the advantage of CONEC-LoRA over prior arts in 4 popular benchmark problems with over 5% margins.
LGJan 25, 2024
Cross-Domain Few-Shot Learning via Adaptive Transformer NetworksNaeem Paeedeh, Mahardhika Pratama, Muhammad Anwar Ma'sum et al.
Most few-shot learning works rely on the same domain assumption between the base and the target tasks, hindering their practical applications. This paper proposes an adaptive transformer network (ADAPTER), a simple but effective solution for cross-domain few-shot learning where there exist large domain shifts between the base task and the target task. ADAPTER is built upon the idea of bidirectional cross-attention to learn transferable features between the two domains. The proposed architecture is trained with DINO to produce diverse, and less biased features to avoid the supervision collapse problem. Furthermore, the label smoothing approach is proposed to improve the consistency and reliability of the predictions by also considering the predicted labels of the close samples in the embedding space. The performance of ADAPTER is rigorously evaluated in the BSCD-FSL benchmarks in which it outperforms prior arts with significant margins.
LGMar 11, 2020
Improving the Backpropagation Algorithm with Consequentialism Weight Updates over Mini-BatchesNaeem Paeedeh, Kamaledin Ghiasi-Shirazi
Many attempts took place to improve the adaptive filters that can also be useful to improve backpropagation (BP). Normalized least mean squares (NLMS) is one of the most successful algorithms derived from Least mean squares (LMS). However, its extension to multi-layer neural networks has not happened before. Here, we first show that it is possible to consider a multi-layer neural network as a stack of adaptive filters. Additionally, we introduce more comprehensible interpretations of NLMS than the complicated geometric interpretation in affine projection algorithm (APA) for a single fully-connected (FC) layer that can easily be generalized to, for instance, convolutional neural networks and also works better with mini-batch training. With this new viewpoint, we introduce a better algorithm by predicting then emending the adverse consequences of the actions that take place in BP even before they happen. Finally, the proposed method is compatible with stochastic gradient descent (SGD) and applicable to momentum-based derivatives such as RMSProp, Adam, and NAG. Our experiments show the usefulness of our algorithm in the training of deep neural networks.