An Abstraction-Based Framework for Neural Network Verification
This work addresses the problem of verifying large neural networks for safety-critical applications, representing an incremental advancement in neural network verification techniques.
The paper tackles the scalability challenge in verifying neural networks for safety-critical systems by proposing an abstraction-based framework that uses over-approximation and refinement to reduce network size, resulting in significant performance improvements when integrated with the Marabou verification tool.
Deep neural networks are increasingly being used as controllers for safety-critical systems. Because neural networks are opaque, certifying their correctness is a significant challenge. To address this issue, several neural network verification approaches have recently been proposed. However, these approaches afford limited scalability, and applying them to large networks can be challenging. In this paper, we propose a framework that can enhance neural network verification techniques by using over-approximation to reduce the size of the network - thus making it more amenable to verification. We perform the approximation such that if the property holds for the smaller (abstract) network, it holds for the original as well. The over-approximation may be too coarse, in which case the underlying verification tool might return a spurious counterexample. Under such conditions, we perform counterexample-guided refinement to adjust the approximation, and then repeat the process. Our approach is orthogonal to, and can be integrated with, many existing verification techniques. For evaluation purposes, we integrate it with the recently proposed Marabou framework, and observe a significant improvement in Marabou's performance. Our experiments demonstrate the great potential of our approach for verifying larger neural networks.