Self-Distilled Self-Supervised Representation Learning
This work addresses the challenge of enhancing representation quality in self-supervised learning for computer vision, offering incremental improvements over existing methods.
The paper tackled the problem of improving self-supervised representation learning by introducing self-distillation to train intermediate layers via contrastive loss, resulting in better performance across layers and outperforming baselines like SimCLR and BYOL in linear evaluation and k-NN tasks.
State-of-the-art frameworks in self-supervised learning have recently shown that fully utilizing transformer-based models can lead to performance boost compared to conventional CNN models. Striving to maximize the mutual information of two views of an image, existing works apply a contrastive loss to the final representations. Motivated by self-distillation in the supervised regime, we further exploit this by allowing the intermediate representations to learn from the final layer via the contrastive loss. Through self-distillation, the intermediate layers are better suited for instance discrimination, making the performance of an early-exited sub-network not much degraded from that of the full network. This renders the pretext task easier also for the final layer, leading to better representations. Our method, Self-Distilled Self-Supervised Learning (SDSSL), outperforms competitive baselines (SimCLR, BYOL and MoCo v3) using ViT on various tasks and datasets. In the linear evaluation and k-NN protocol, SDSSL not only leads to superior performance in the final layers, but also in most of the lower layers. Furthermore, qualitative and quantitative analyses show how representations are formed more effectively along the transformer layers. Code is available at https://github.com/hagiss/SDSSL.