NELGMLMar 18, 2017

Curriculum Dropout

arXiv:1703.06229v2119 citations
AI Analysis

This incremental improvement addresses overfitting in neural networks for image classification tasks.

The paper tackles the suboptimal use of a fixed dropout probability in neural networks by proposing Curriculum Dropout, a time-scheduled adaptive regularization scheme that gradually increases dropout probability during training, resulting in better generalization on seven image classification datasets.

Dropout is a very effective way of regularizing neural networks. Stochastically "dropping out" units with a certain probability discourages over-specific co-adaptations of feature detectors, preventing overfitting and improving network generalization. Besides, Dropout can be interpreted as an approximate model aggregation technique, where an exponential number of smaller networks are averaged in order to get a more powerful ensemble. In this paper, we show that using a fixed dropout probability during training is a suboptimal choice. We thus propose a time scheduling for the probability of retaining neurons in the network. This induces an adaptive regularization scheme that smoothly increases the difficulty of the optimization problem. This idea of "starting easy" and adaptively increasing the difficulty of the learning problem has its roots in curriculum learning and allows one to train better models. Indeed, we prove that our optimization strategy implements a very general curriculum scheme, by gradually adding noise to both the input and intermediate feature representations within the network architecture. Experiments on seven image classification datasets and different network architectures show that our method, named Curriculum Dropout, frequently yields to better generalization and, at worst, performs just as well as the standard Dropout method.

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