scholarly journals Modality to Modality Translation: An Adversarial Representation Learning and Graph Fusion Network for Multimodal Fusion

2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (01) ◽  
pp. 164-172
Author(s):  
Sijie Mai ◽  
Haifeng Hu ◽  
Songlong Xing

Learning joint embedding space for various modalities is of vital importance for multimodal fusion. Mainstream modality fusion approaches fail to achieve this goal, leaving a modality gap which heavily affects cross-modal fusion. In this paper, we propose a novel adversarial encoder-decoder-classifier framework to learn a modality-invariant embedding space. Since the distributions of various modalities vary in nature, to reduce the modality gap, we translate the distributions of source modalities into that of target modality via their respective encoders using adversarial training. Furthermore, we exert additional constraints on embedding space by introducing reconstruction loss and classification loss. Then we fuse the encoded representations using hierarchical graph neural network which explicitly explores unimodal, bimodal and trimodal interactions in multi-stage. Our method achieves state-of-the-art performance on multiple datasets. Visualization of the learned embeddings suggests that the joint embedding space learned by our method is discriminative.

2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (04) ◽  
pp. 3858-3865
Author(s):  
Huijie Feng ◽  
Chunpeng Wu ◽  
Guoyang Chen ◽  
Weifeng Zhang ◽  
Yang Ning

Recently smoothing deep neural network based classifiers via isotropic Gaussian perturbation is shown to be an effective and scalable way to provide state-of-the-art probabilistic robustness guarantee against ℓ2 norm bounded adversarial perturbations. However, how to train a good base classifier that is accurate and robust when smoothed has not been fully investigated. In this work, we derive a new regularized risk, in which the regularizer can adaptively encourage the accuracy and robustness of the smoothed counterpart when training the base classifier. It is computationally efficient and can be implemented in parallel with other empirical defense methods. We discuss how to implement it under both standard (non-adversarial) and adversarial training scheme. At the same time, we also design a new certification algorithm, which can leverage the regularization effect to provide tighter robustness lower bound that holds with high probability. Our extensive experimentation demonstrates the effectiveness of the proposed training and certification approaches on CIFAR-10 and ImageNet datasets.


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (03) ◽  
pp. 2950-2958
Author(s):  
Guanglin Niu ◽  
Yongfei Zhang ◽  
Bo Li ◽  
Peng Cui ◽  
Si Liu ◽  
...  

Representation learning on a knowledge graph (KG) is to embed entities and relations of a KG into low-dimensional continuous vector spaces. Early KG embedding methods only pay attention to structured information encoded in triples, which would cause limited performance due to the structure sparseness of KGs. Some recent attempts consider paths information to expand the structure of KGs but lack explainability in the process of obtaining the path representations. In this paper, we propose a novel Rule and Path-based Joint Embedding (RPJE) scheme, which takes full advantage of the explainability and accuracy of logic rules, the generalization of KG embedding as well as the supplementary semantic structure of paths. Specifically, logic rules of different lengths (the number of relations in rule body) in the form of Horn clauses are first mined from the KG and elaborately encoded for representation learning. Then, the rules of length 2 are applied to compose paths accurately while the rules of length 1 are explicitly employed to create semantic associations among relations and constrain relation embeddings. Moreover, the confidence level of each rule is also considered in optimization to guarantee the availability of applying the rule to representation learning. Extensive experimental results illustrate that RPJE outperforms other state-of-the-art baselines on KG completion task, which also demonstrate the superiority of utilizing logic rules as well as paths for improving the accuracy and explainability of representation learning.


Author(s):  
Yao Ni ◽  
Dandan Song ◽  
Xi Zhang ◽  
Hao Wu ◽  
Lejian Liao

Generative adversarial networks (GANs) have shown impressive results, however, the generator and the discriminator are optimized in finite parameter space which means their performance still need to be improved. In this paper, we propose a novel approach of adversarial training between one generator and an exponential number of critics which are sampled from the original discriminative neural network via dropout. As discrepancy between outputs of different sub-networks of a same sample can measure the consistency of these critics, we encourage the critics to be consistent to real samples and inconsistent to generated samples during training, while the generator is trained to generate consistent samples for different critics. Experimental results demonstrate that our method can obtain state-of-the-art Inception scores of 9.17 and 10.02 on supervised CIFAR-10 and unsupervised STL-10 image generation tasks, respectively, as well as achieve competitive semi-supervised classification results on several benchmarks. Importantly, we demonstrate that our method can maintain stability in training and alleviate mode collapse.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Muhammad Ghifary

<p>Machine learning has achieved great successes in the area of computer vision, especially in object recognition or classification. One of the core factors of the successes is the availability of massive labeled image or video data for training, collected manually by human. Labeling source training data, however, can be expensive and time consuming. Furthermore, a large amount of labeled source data may not always guarantee traditional machine learning techniques to generalize well; there is a potential bias or mismatch in the data, i.e., the training data do not represent the target environment.  To mitigate the above dataset bias/mismatch, one can consider domain adaptation: utilizing labeled training data and unlabeled target data to develop a well-performing classifier on the target environment. In some cases, however, the unlabeled target data are nonexistent, but multiple labeled sources of data exist. Such situations can be addressed by domain generalization: using multiple source training sets to produce a classifier that generalizes on the unseen target domain. Although several domain adaptation and generalization approaches have been proposed, the domain mismatch in object recognition remains a challenging, open problem – the model performance has yet reached to a satisfactory level in real world applications.  The overall goal of this thesis is to progress towards solving dataset bias in visual object recognition through representation learning in the context of domain adaptation and domain generalization. Representation learning is concerned with finding proper data representations or features via learning rather than via engineering by human experts. This thesis proposes several representation learning solutions based on deep learning and kernel methods.  This thesis introduces a robust-to-noise deep neural network for handwritten digit classification trained on “clean” images only, which we name Deep Hybrid Network (DHN). DHNs are based on a particular combination of sparse autoencoders and restricted Boltzmann machines. The results show that DHN performs better than the standard deep neural network in recognizing digits with Gaussian and impulse noise, block and border occlusions.  This thesis proposes the Domain Adaptive Neural Network (DaNN), a neural network based domain adaptation algorithm that minimizes the classification error and the domain discrepancy between the source and target data representations. The experiments show the competitiveness of DaNN against several state-of-the-art methods on a benchmark object dataset.  This thesis develops the Multi-task Autoencoder (MTAE), a domain generalization algorithm based on autoencoders trained via multi-task learning. MTAE learns to transform the original image into its analogs in multiple related domains simultaneously. The results show that the MTAE’s representations provide better classification performance than some alternative autoencoder-based models as well as the current state-of-the-art domain generalization algorithms.  This thesis proposes a fast kernel-based representation learning algorithm for both domain adaptation and domain generalization, Scatter Component Analysis (SCA). SCA finds a data representation that trades between maximizing the separability of classes, minimizing the mismatch between domains, and maximizing the separability of the whole data points. The results show that SCA performs much faster than some competitive algorithms, while providing state-of-the-art accuracy in both domain adaptation and domain generalization.  Finally, this thesis presents the Deep Reconstruction-Classification Network (DRCN), a deep convolutional network for domain adaptation. DRCN learns to classify labeled source data and also to reconstruct unlabeled target data via a shared encoding representation. The results show that DRCN provides competitive or better performance than the prior state-of-the-art model on several cross-domain object datasets.</p>


Author(s):  
Min Shi ◽  
Yufei Tang ◽  
Xingquan Zhu ◽  
David Wilson ◽  
Jianxun Liu

Networked data often demonstrate the Pareto principle (i.e., 80/20 rule) with skewed class distributions, where most vertices belong to a few majority classes and minority classes only contain a handful of instances. When presented with imbalanced class distributions, existing graph embedding learning tends to bias to nodes from majority classes, leaving nodes from minority classes under-trained. In this paper, we propose Dual-Regularized Graph Convolutional Networks (DR-GCN) to handle multi-class imbalanced graphs, where two types of regularization are imposed to tackle class imbalanced representation learning. To ensure that all classes are equally represented, we propose a class-conditioned adversarial training process to facilitate the separation of labeled nodes. Meanwhile, to maintain training equilibrium (i.e., retaining quality of fit across all classes), we force unlabeled nodes to follow a similar latent distribution to the labeled nodes by minimizing their difference in the embedding space. Experiments on real-world imbalanced graphs demonstrate that DR-GCN outperforms the state-of-the-art methods in node classification, graph clustering, and visualization.


Author(s):  
Yao Xu ◽  
Xueshuang Xiang ◽  
Meiyu Huang

This paper introduces a novel deep learning based method, named bridge neural network (BNN) to dig the potential relationship between two given data sources task by task. The proposed approach employs two convolutional neural networks that project the two data sources into a feature space to learn the desired common representation required by the specific task. The training objective with artificial negative samples is introduced with the ability of mini-batch training and it’s asymptotically equivalent to maximizing the total correlation of the two data sources, which is verified by the theoretical analysis. The experiments on the tasks, including pair matching, canonical correlation analysis, transfer learning, and reconstruction demonstrate the state-of-the-art performance of BNN, which may provide new insights into the aspect of common representation learning.


Author(s):  
Zhesong Yu ◽  
Xiaoshuo Xu ◽  
Xiaoou Chen ◽  
Deshun Yang

Cover song identification is an important problem in the field of Music Information Retrieval. Most existing methods rely on hand-crafted features and sequence alignment methods, and further breakthrough is hard to achieve. In this paper, Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) are used for representation learning toward this task. We show that they could be naturally adapted to deal with key transposition in cover songs. Additionally, Temporal Pyramid Pooling is utilized to extract information on different scales and transform songs with different lengths into fixed-dimensional representations. Furthermore, a training scheme is designed to enhance the robustness of our model. Extensive experiments demonstrate that combined with these techniques, our approach is robust against musical variations existing in cover songs and outperforms state-of-the-art methods on several datasets with low time complexity.


Author(s):  
Yanzhao Xie ◽  
Yu Liu ◽  
Yangtao Wang ◽  
Lianli Gao ◽  
Peng Wang ◽  
...  

For the multi-label image retrieval, the existing hashing algorithms neglect the dependency between objects and thus fail to capture the attention information in the feature extraction, which affects the precision of hash codes. To address this problem, we explore the inter-dependency between objects through their co-occurrence correlation from the label set and adopt Multi-modal Factorized Bilinear (MFB) pooling component so that the image representation learning can capture this attention information. We propose a Label-Attended Hashing (LAH) algorithm which enables an end-to-end hash model with inter-dependency feature extraction. LAH first combines Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) and Graph Convolution Network (GCN) to separately generate the image representation and label co-occurrence embeddings, then adopts MFB to fuse these two modal vectors, finally learns the hash function with a Cauchy distribution based loss function via back propagation. Extensive experiments on public multi-label datasets demonstrate that (1) LAH can achieve the state-of-the-art retrieval results and (2) the usage of co-occurrence relationship and MFB not only promotes the precision of hash codes but also accelerates the hash learning. GitHub address: https://github.com/IDSM-AI/LAH.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Muhammad Ghifary

<p>Machine learning has achieved great successes in the area of computer vision, especially in object recognition or classification. One of the core factors of the successes is the availability of massive labeled image or video data for training, collected manually by human. Labeling source training data, however, can be expensive and time consuming. Furthermore, a large amount of labeled source data may not always guarantee traditional machine learning techniques to generalize well; there is a potential bias or mismatch in the data, i.e., the training data do not represent the target environment.  To mitigate the above dataset bias/mismatch, one can consider domain adaptation: utilizing labeled training data and unlabeled target data to develop a well-performing classifier on the target environment. In some cases, however, the unlabeled target data are nonexistent, but multiple labeled sources of data exist. Such situations can be addressed by domain generalization: using multiple source training sets to produce a classifier that generalizes on the unseen target domain. Although several domain adaptation and generalization approaches have been proposed, the domain mismatch in object recognition remains a challenging, open problem – the model performance has yet reached to a satisfactory level in real world applications.  The overall goal of this thesis is to progress towards solving dataset bias in visual object recognition through representation learning in the context of domain adaptation and domain generalization. Representation learning is concerned with finding proper data representations or features via learning rather than via engineering by human experts. This thesis proposes several representation learning solutions based on deep learning and kernel methods.  This thesis introduces a robust-to-noise deep neural network for handwritten digit classification trained on “clean” images only, which we name Deep Hybrid Network (DHN). DHNs are based on a particular combination of sparse autoencoders and restricted Boltzmann machines. The results show that DHN performs better than the standard deep neural network in recognizing digits with Gaussian and impulse noise, block and border occlusions.  This thesis proposes the Domain Adaptive Neural Network (DaNN), a neural network based domain adaptation algorithm that minimizes the classification error and the domain discrepancy between the source and target data representations. The experiments show the competitiveness of DaNN against several state-of-the-art methods on a benchmark object dataset.  This thesis develops the Multi-task Autoencoder (MTAE), a domain generalization algorithm based on autoencoders trained via multi-task learning. MTAE learns to transform the original image into its analogs in multiple related domains simultaneously. The results show that the MTAE’s representations provide better classification performance than some alternative autoencoder-based models as well as the current state-of-the-art domain generalization algorithms.  This thesis proposes a fast kernel-based representation learning algorithm for both domain adaptation and domain generalization, Scatter Component Analysis (SCA). SCA finds a data representation that trades between maximizing the separability of classes, minimizing the mismatch between domains, and maximizing the separability of the whole data points. The results show that SCA performs much faster than some competitive algorithms, while providing state-of-the-art accuracy in both domain adaptation and domain generalization.  Finally, this thesis presents the Deep Reconstruction-Classification Network (DRCN), a deep convolutional network for domain adaptation. DRCN learns to classify labeled source data and also to reconstruct unlabeled target data via a shared encoding representation. The results show that DRCN provides competitive or better performance than the prior state-of-the-art model on several cross-domain object datasets.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (03) ◽  
pp. 2594-2601
Author(s):  
Arjun Akula ◽  
Shuai Wang ◽  
Song-Chun Zhu

We present CoCoX (short for Conceptual and Counterfactual Explanations), a model for explaining decisions made by a deep convolutional neural network (CNN). In Cognitive Psychology, the factors (or semantic-level features) that humans zoom in on when they imagine an alternative to a model prediction are often referred to as fault-lines. Motivated by this, our CoCoX model explains decisions made by a CNN using fault-lines. Specifically, given an input image I for which a CNN classification model M predicts class cpred, our fault-line based explanation identifies the minimal semantic-level features (e.g., stripes on zebra, pointed ears of dog), referred to as explainable concepts, that need to be added to or deleted from I in order to alter the classification category of I by M to another specified class calt. We argue that, due to the conceptual and counterfactual nature of fault-lines, our CoCoX explanations are practical and more natural for both expert and non-expert users to understand the internal workings of complex deep learning models. Extensive quantitative and qualitative experiments verify our hypotheses, showing that CoCoX significantly outperforms the state-of-the-art explainable AI models. Our implementation is available at https://github.com/arjunakula/CoCoX


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