CVApr 1, 2020

Memory-Efficient Incremental Learning Through Feature Adaptation

arXiv:2004.00713v2200 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses memory constraints in incremental learning for computer vision applications, offering a practical improvement over existing methods.

The paper tackles the problem of memory-intensive incremental learning by preserving feature descriptors instead of images, reducing memory footprint by at least an order of magnitude while achieving state-of-the-art classification accuracy.

We introduce an approach for incremental learning that preserves feature descriptors of training images from previously learned classes, instead of the images themselves, unlike most existing work. Keeping the much lower-dimensional feature embeddings of images reduces the memory footprint significantly. We assume that the model is updated incrementally for new classes as new data becomes available sequentially.This requires adapting the previously stored feature vectors to the updated feature space without having access to the corresponding original training images. Feature adaptation is learned with a multi-layer perceptron, which is trained on feature pairs corresponding to the outputs of the original and updated network on a training image. We validate experimentally that such a transformation generalizes well to the features of the previous set of classes, and maps features to a discriminative subspace in the feature space. As a result, the classifier is optimized jointly over new and old classes without requiring old class images. Experimental results show that our method achieves state-of-the-art classification accuracy in incremental learning benchmarks, while having at least an order of magnitude lower memory footprint compared to image-preserving strategies.

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