No Arabic abstract
Learning with noisy labels has gained the enormous interest in the robust deep learning area. Recent studies have empirically disclosed that utilizing dual networks can enhance the performance of single network but without theoretic proof. In this paper, we propose Cooperative Learning (CooL) framework for noisy supervision that analytically explains the effects of leveraging dual or multiple networks. Specifically, the simple but efficient combination in CooL yields a more reliable risk minimization for unseen clean data. A range of experiments have been conducted on several benchmarks with both synthetic and real-world settings. Extensive results indicate that CooL outperforms several state-of-the-art methods.
Reinforcement learning has achieved great success in various applications. To learn an effective policy for the agent, it usually requires a huge amount of data by interacting with the environment, which could be computational costly and time consuming. To overcome this challenge, the framework called Reinforcement Learning with Expert Demonstrations (RLED) was proposed to exploit the supervision from expert demonstrations. Although the RLED methods can reduce the number of learning iterations, they usually assume the demonstrations are perfect, and thus may be seriously misled by the noisy demonstrations in real applications. In this paper, we propose a novel framework to adaptively learn the policy by jointly interacting with the environment and exploiting the expert demonstrations. Specifically, for each step of the demonstration trajectory, we form an instance, and define a joint loss function to simultaneously maximize the expected reward and minimize the difference between agent behaviors and demonstrations. Most importantly, by calculating the expected gain of the value function, we assign each instance with a weight to estimate its potential utility, and thus can emphasize the more helpful demonstrations while filter out noisy ones. Experimental results in various environments with multiple popular reinforcement learning algorithms show that the proposed approach can learn robustly with noisy demonstrations, and achieve higher performance in fewer iterations.
Noisy labels, resulting from mistakes in manual labeling or webly data collecting for supervised learning, can cause neural networks to overfit the misleading information and degrade the generalization performance. Self-supervised learning works in the absence of labels and thus eliminates the negative impact of noisy labels. Motivated by co-training with both supervised learning view and self-supervised learning view, we propose a simple yet effective method called Co-learning for learning with noisy labels. Co-learning performs supervised learning and self-supervised learning in a cooperative way. The constraints of intrinsic similarity with the self-supervised module and the structural similarity with the noisily-supervised module are imposed on a shared common feature encoder to regularize the network to maximize the agreement between the two constraints. Co-learning is compared with peer methods on corrupted data from benchmark datasets fairly, and extensive results are provided which demonstrate that Co-learning is superior to many state-of-the-art approaches.
As tons of photos are being uploaded to public websites (e.g., Flickr, Bing, and Google) every day, learning from web data has become an increasingly popular research direction because of freely available web resources, which is also referred to as webly supervised learning. Nevertheless, the performance gap between webly supervised learning and traditional supervised learning is still very large, owning to the label noise of web data. To be exact, the labels of images crawled from public websites are very noisy and often inaccurate. Some existing works tend to facilitate learning from web data with the aid of extra information, such as augmenting or purifying web data by virtue of instance-level supervision, which is usually in demand of heavy manual annotation. Instead, we propose to tackle the label noise by leveraging more accessible category-level supervision. In particular, we build our method upon variational autoencoder (VAE), in which the classification network is attached on the hidden layer of VAE in a way that the classification network and VAE can jointly leverage the category-level hybrid semantic information. The effectiveness of our proposed method is clearly demonstrated by extensive experiments on three benchmark datasets.
This paper formalizes the binarization operations over neural networks from a learning perspective. In contrast to classical hand crafted rules (eg hard thresholding) to binarize full-precision neurons, we propose to learn a mapping from full-precision neurons to the target binary ones. Each individual weight entry will not be binarized independently. Instead, they are taken as a whole to accomplish the binarization, just as they work together in generating convolution features. To help the training of the binarization mapping, the full-precision neurons after taking sign operations is regarded as some auxiliary supervision signal, which is noisy but still has valuable guidance. An unbiased estimator is therefore introduced to mitigate the influence of the supervision noise. Experimental results on benchmark datasets indicate that the proposed binarization technique attains consistent improvements over baselines.
Communication is a important factor that enables agents work cooperatively in multi-agent reinforcement learning (MARL). Most previous work uses continuous message communication whose high representational capacity comes at the expense of interpretability. Allowing agents to learn their own discrete message communication protocol emerged from a variety of domains can increase the interpretability for human designers and other agents.This paper proposes a method to generate discrete messages analogous to human languages, and achieve communication by a broadcast-and-listen mechanism based on self-attention. We show that discrete message communication has performance comparable to continuous message communication but with much a much smaller vocabulary size.Furthermore, we propose an approach that allows humans to interactively send discrete messages to agents.