CVLGMar 2, 2019

Learning Robust Representations by Projecting Superficial Statistics Out

arXiv:1903.06256v1252 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the issue of poor generalization in AI models for applications like image classification, though it is incremental as it builds on prior domain generalization work.

The paper tackled the problem of deep neural networks relying on superficial statistics like texture, which causes them to fail under distribution shift, by proposing methods to project out these statistics using GLCM, achieving comparable or better performance on domain generalization datasets without needing target domain samples.

Despite impressive performance as evaluated on i.i.d. holdout data, deep neural networks depend heavily on superficial statistics of the training data and are liable to break under distribution shift. For example, subtle changes to the background or texture of an image can break a seemingly powerful classifier. Building on previous work on domain generalization, we hope to produce a classifier that will generalize to previously unseen domains, even when domain identifiers are not available during training. This setting is challenging because the model may extract many distribution-specific (superficial) signals together with distribution-agnostic (semantic) signals. To overcome this challenge, we incorporate the gray-level co-occurrence matrix (GLCM) to extract patterns that our prior knowledge suggests are superficial: they are sensitive to the texture but unable to capture the gestalt of an image. Then we introduce two techniques for improving our networks' out-of-sample performance. The first method is built on the reverse gradient method that pushes our model to learn representations from which the GLCM representation is not predictable. The second method is built on the independence introduced by projecting the model's representation onto the subspace orthogonal to GLCM representation's. We test our method on the battery of standard domain generalization data sets and, interestingly, achieve comparable or better performance as compared to other domain generalization methods that explicitly require samples from the target distribution for training.

Foundations

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