Long-Tailed Classification by Keeping the Good and Removing the Bad Momentum Causal Effect
As the class size grows, maintaining a balanced dataset across many classes is challenging because the data are long-tailed in nature; it is even impossible when the sample-of-interest co-exists with each other in one collectable unit, e.g., multiple visual instances in one image. Therefore, long-ta...
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Zusammenfassung: | As the class size grows, maintaining a balanced dataset across many classes
is challenging because the data are long-tailed in nature; it is even
impossible when the sample-of-interest co-exists with each other in one
collectable unit, e.g., multiple visual instances in one image. Therefore,
long-tailed classification is the key to deep learning at scale. However,
existing methods are mainly based on re-weighting/re-sampling heuristics that
lack a fundamental theory. In this paper, we establish a causal inference
framework, which not only unravels the whys of previous methods, but also
derives a new principled solution. Specifically, our theory shows that the SGD
momentum is essentially a confounder in long-tailed classification. On one
hand, it has a harmful causal effect that misleads the tail prediction biased
towards the head. On the other hand, its induced mediation also benefits the
representation learning and head prediction. Our framework elegantly
disentangles the paradoxical effects of the momentum, by pursuing the direct
causal effect caused by an input sample. In particular, we use causal
intervention in training, and counterfactual reasoning in inference, to remove
the "bad" while keep the "good". We achieve new state-of-the-arts on three
long-tailed visual recognition benchmarks: Long-tailed CIFAR-10/-100,
ImageNet-LT for image classification and LVIS for instance segmentation. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2009.12991 |