Deep Discriminative Learning for Unsupervised Domain Adaptation
This addresses the problem of adapting models to new domains without labeled data, which is incremental as it builds on existing domain adaptation methods.
The paper tackles unsupervised domain adaptation by directly learning a classifier for the unlabeled target domain, achieving state-of-the-art results on image classification benchmarks and an Amazon reviews sentiment dataset.
The primary objective of domain adaptation methods is to transfer knowledge from a source domain to a target domain that has similar but different data distributions. Thus, in order to correctly classify the unlabeled target domain samples, the standard approach is to learn a common representation for both source and target domain, thereby indirectly addressing the problem of learning a classifier in the target domain. However, such an approach does not address the task of classification in the target domain directly. In contrast, we propose an approach that directly addresses the problem of learning a classifier in the unlabeled target domain. In particular, we train a classifier to correctly classify the training samples while simultaneously classifying the samples in the target domain in an unsupervised manner. The corresponding model is referred to as Discriminative Encoding for Domain Adaptation (DEDA). We show that this simple approach for performing unsupervised domain adaptation is indeed quite powerful. Our method achieves state of the art results in unsupervised adaptation tasks on various image classification benchmarks. We also obtained state of the art performance on domain adaptation in Amazon reviews sentiment classification dataset. We perform additional experiments when the source data has less labeled examples and also on zero-shot domain adaptation task where no target domain samples are used for training.