LGApr 26, 2022

Novel Applications for VAE-based Anomaly Detection Systems

arXiv:2204.12577v112 citationsh-index: 21
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses ethical issues in generative AI by enabling automatic filtering of unwanted content, but it is incremental as it builds on existing anomaly detection methods.

The authors tackled the problem of deep generative models producing unwanted content like offensive language or misinformation by repurposing an anomaly detection system to generate novel data while avoiding specified unwanted data, resulting in the V-ABC model that shows potential for filtering such content.

The recent rise in deep learning technologies fueled innovation and boosted scientific research. Their achievements enabled new research directions for deep generative modeling (DGM), an increasingly popular approach that can create novel and unseen data, starting from a given data set. As the technology shows promising applications, many ethical issues also arise. For example, their misuse can enable disinformation campaigns and powerful phishing attempts. Research also indicates different biases affect deep learning models, leading to social issues such as misrepresentation. In this work, we formulate a novel setting to deal with similar problems, showing that a repurposed anomaly detection system effectively generates novel data, avoiding generating specified unwanted data. We propose Variational Auto-encoding Binary Classifiers (V-ABC): a novel model that repurposes and extends the Auto-encoding Binary Classifier (ABC) anomaly detector, using the Variational Auto-encoder (VAE). We survey the limitations of existing approaches and explore many tools to show the model's inner workings in an interpretable way. This proposal has excellent potential for generative applications: models that rely on user-generated data could automatically filter out unwanted content, such as offensive language, obscene images, and misleading information.

Foundations

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