SLOSH: Set LOcality Sensitive Hashing via Sliced-Wasserstein Embeddings
This addresses set retrieval for machine learning and computer vision applications, presenting an incremental improvement over existing methods.
The paper tackles the problem of set retrieval by proposing SLOSH, a method that uses Sliced-Wasserstein embeddings for efficient nearest neighbor search, showing consistent improvements over standard set embedding approaches on various datasets.
Learning from set-structured data is an essential problem with many applications in machine learning and computer vision. This paper focuses on non-parametric and data-independent learning from set-structured data using approximate nearest neighbor (ANN) solutions, particularly locality-sensitive hashing. We consider the problem of set retrieval from an input set query. Such retrieval problem requires: 1) an efficient mechanism to calculate the distances/dissimilarities between sets, and 2) an appropriate data structure for fast nearest neighbor search. To that end, we propose Sliced-Wasserstein set embedding as a computationally efficient "set-2-vector" mechanism that enables downstream ANN, with theoretical guarantees. The set elements are treated as samples from an unknown underlying distribution, and the Sliced-Wasserstein distance is used to compare sets. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our algorithm, denoted as Set-LOcality Sensitive Hashing (SLOSH), on various set retrieval datasets and compare our proposed embedding with standard set embedding approaches, including Generalized Mean (GeM) embedding/pooling, Featurewise Sort Pooling (FSPool), and Covariance Pooling and show consistent improvement in retrieval results. The code for replicating our results is available here: \href{https://github.com/mint-vu/SLOSH}{https://github.com/mint-vu/SLOSH}.