CVLGNov 3, 2022

ImageNet-X: Understanding Model Mistakes with Factor of Variation Annotations

Meta AI
arXiv:2211.01866v149 citationsh-index: 46
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for explainable AI in vision systems, providing tools to diagnose model mistakes, though it is incremental as it builds on existing benchmarks without proposing new methods.

The paper tackles the problem of understanding why deep learning vision models fail by introducing ImageNet-X, a dataset with human annotations of factors like pose and lighting for ImageNet images, and finds that models have consistent failure modes across these factors regardless of architecture or training, with data augmentation sometimes causing negative spill-over effects.

Deep learning vision systems are widely deployed across applications where reliability is critical. However, even today's best models can fail to recognize an object when its pose, lighting, or background varies. While existing benchmarks surface examples challenging for models, they do not explain why such mistakes arise. To address this need, we introduce ImageNet-X, a set of sixteen human annotations of factors such as pose, background, or lighting the entire ImageNet-1k validation set as well as a random subset of 12k training images. Equipped with ImageNet-X, we investigate 2,200 current recognition models and study the types of mistakes as a function of model's (1) architecture, e.g. transformer vs. convolutional, (2) learning paradigm, e.g. supervised vs. self-supervised, and (3) training procedures, e.g., data augmentation. Regardless of these choices, we find models have consistent failure modes across ImageNet-X categories. We also find that while data augmentation can improve robustness to certain factors, they induce spill-over effects to other factors. For example, strong random cropping hurts robustness on smaller objects. Together, these insights suggest to advance the robustness of modern vision models, future research should focus on collecting additional data and understanding data augmentation schemes. Along with these insights, we release a toolkit based on ImageNet-X to spur further study into the mistakes image recognition systems make.

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