Towards Self-similarity Consistency and Feature Discrimination for Unsupervised Domain Adaptation
Recent advances in unsupervised domain adaptation mainly focus on learning shared representations by global distribution alignment without considering class information across domains. The neglect of class information, however, may lead to partial alignment (or even misalignment) and poor generaliza...
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Zusammenfassung: | Recent advances in unsupervised domain adaptation mainly focus on learning
shared representations by global distribution alignment without considering
class information across domains. The neglect of class information, however,
may lead to partial alignment (or even misalignment) and poor generalization
performance. For comprehensive alignment, we argue that the similarities across
different features in the source domain should be consistent with that of in
the target domain. Based on this assumption, we propose a new domain
discrepancy metric, i.e., Self-similarity Consistency (SSC), to enforce the
feature structure being consistent across domains. The renowned correlation
alignment (CORAL) is proven to be a special case, and a sub-optimal measure of
our proposed SSC. Furthermore, we also propose to mitigate the side effect of
the partial alignment and misalignment by incorporating the discriminative
information of the deep representations. Specifically, an embarrassingly simple
and effective feature norm constraint is exploited to enlarge the discrepancy
of inter-class samples. It relieves the requirements of strict alignment when
performing adaptation, therefore improving the adaptation performance
significantly. Extensive experiments on visual domain adaptation tasks
demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed SSC metric and feature
discrimination approach. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1904.06490 |