Black-box adversarial attacks using Evolution Strategies
This addresses the vulnerability of deep neural networks to adversarial attacks in real-world scenarios where gradient information is unavailable, but it is incremental as it compares existing methods.
The paper tackled the problem of generating black-box adversarial attacks for image classification by comparing three evolution strategies, finding that neural networks can often be easily fooled, with some algorithms performing better in harder setups in terms of success rate and query efficiency.
In the last decade, deep neural networks have proven to be very powerful in computer vision tasks, starting a revolution in the computer vision and machine learning fields. However, deep neural networks, usually, are not robust to perturbations of the input data. In fact, several studies showed that slightly changing the content of the images can cause a dramatic decrease in the accuracy of the attacked neural network. Several methods able to generate adversarial samples make use of gradients, which usually are not available to an attacker in real-world scenarios. As opposed to this class of attacks, another class of adversarial attacks, called black-box adversarial attacks, emerged, which does not make use of information on the gradients, being more suitable for real-world attack scenarios. In this work, we compare three well-known evolution strategies on the generation of black-box adversarial attacks for image classification tasks. While our results show that the attacked neural networks can be, in most cases, easily fooled by all the algorithms under comparison, they also show that some black-box optimization algorithms may be better in "harder" setups, both in terms of attack success rate and efficiency (i.e., number of queries).