CVLGMLMar 19, 2021

ConViT: Improving Vision Transformers with Soft Convolutional Inductive Biases

arXiv:2103.10697v21035 citationsHas Code
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This work addresses the need for more efficient and effective vision models for image classification tasks, offering a hybrid approach that mitigates the limitations of existing architectures.

The authors tackled the problem of combining the sample efficiency of convolutional neural networks with the high performance ceiling of Vision Transformers by introducing gated positional self-attention (GPSA) with a soft convolutional inductive bias, resulting in ConViT outperforming DeiT on ImageNet with improved sample efficiency.

Convolutional architectures have proven extremely successful for vision tasks. Their hard inductive biases enable sample-efficient learning, but come at the cost of a potentially lower performance ceiling. Vision Transformers (ViTs) rely on more flexible self-attention layers, and have recently outperformed CNNs for image classification. However, they require costly pre-training on large external datasets or distillation from pre-trained convolutional networks. In this paper, we ask the following question: is it possible to combine the strengths of these two architectures while avoiding their respective limitations? To this end, we introduce gated positional self-attention (GPSA), a form of positional self-attention which can be equipped with a ``soft" convolutional inductive bias. We initialise the GPSA layers to mimic the locality of convolutional layers, then give each attention head the freedom to escape locality by adjusting a gating parameter regulating the attention paid to position versus content information. The resulting convolutional-like ViT architecture, ConViT, outperforms the DeiT on ImageNet, while offering a much improved sample efficiency. We further investigate the role of locality in learning by first quantifying how it is encouraged in vanilla self-attention layers, then analysing how it is escaped in GPSA layers. We conclude by presenting various ablations to better understand the success of the ConViT. Our code and models are released publicly at https://github.com/facebookresearch/convit.

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