PLATINUM: Semi-Supervised Model Agnostic Meta-Learning using Submodular Mutual Information
This work addresses few-shot classification for machine learning applications by enhancing meta-learning with semi-supervised techniques, representing an incremental improvement over existing approaches.
The paper tackles few-shot classification by proposing PLATINUM, a semi-supervised model agnostic meta-learning framework that uses submodular mutual information to leverage unlabeled data, resulting in improved performance over methods like MAML and pseudo-labeling, especially with few labeled examples per class.
Few-shot classification (FSC) requires training models using a few (typically one to five) data points per class. Meta learning has proven to be able to learn a parametrized model for FSC by training on various other classification tasks. In this work, we propose PLATINUM (semi-suPervised modeL Agnostic meTa-learnIng usiNg sUbmodular Mutual information), a novel semi-supervised model agnostic meta-learning framework that uses the submodular mutual information (SMI) functions to boost the performance of FSC. PLATINUM leverages unlabeled data in the inner and outer loop using SMI functions during meta-training and obtains richer meta-learned parameterizations for meta-test. We study the performance of PLATINUM in two scenarios - 1) where the unlabeled data points belong to the same set of classes as the labeled set of a certain episode, and 2) where there exist out-of-distribution classes that do not belong to the labeled set. We evaluate our method on various settings on the miniImageNet, tieredImageNet and Fewshot-CIFAR100 datasets. Our experiments show that PLATINUM outperforms MAML and semi-supervised approaches like pseduo-labeling for semi-supervised FSC, especially for small ratio of labeled examples per class.