From Attribution to Action: Jointly ALIGNing Predictions and Explanations
This work addresses the challenge of scaling interpretable AI in computer vision by reducing reliance on low-quality annotations, though it is incremental in improving existing methods.
The paper tackles the problem of noisy supervision in explanation-guided learning by proposing ALIGN, a framework that jointly trains a classifier and masker to improve interpretability and generalization, achieving superior performance on domain generalization benchmarks like VLCS and Terra Incognita.
Explanation-guided learning (EGL) has shown promise in aligning model predictions with interpretable reasoning, particularly in computer vision tasks. However, most approaches rely on external annotations or heuristic-based segmentation to supervise model explanations, which can be noisy, imprecise and difficult to scale. In this work, we provide both empirical and theoretical evidence that low-quality supervision signals can degrade model performance rather than improve it. In response, we propose ALIGN, a novel framework that jointly trains a classifier and a masker in an iterative manner. The masker learns to produce soft, task-relevant masks that highlight informative regions, while the classifier is optimized for both prediction accuracy and alignment between its saliency maps and the learned masks. By leveraging high-quality masks as guidance, ALIGN improves both interpretability and generalizability, showing its superiority across various settings. Experiments on the two domain generalization benchmarks, VLCS and Terra Incognita, show that ALIGN consistently outperforms six strong baselines in both in-distribution and out-of-distribution settings. Besides, ALIGN also yields superior explanation quality concerning sufficiency and comprehensiveness, highlighting its effectiveness in producing accurate and interpretable models.