Active Dynamic Weighting for multi-domain adaptation

Multi-source unsupervised domain adaptation aims to transfer knowledge from multiple labeled source domains to an unlabeled target domain. Existing methods either seek a mixture of distributions across various domains or combine multiple single-source models for weighted fusion in the decision proce...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neural networks 2024-09, Vol.177, p.106398, Article 106398
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Long, Zhou, Bo, Zhao, Zhipeng, Liu, Zening
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Multi-source unsupervised domain adaptation aims to transfer knowledge from multiple labeled source domains to an unlabeled target domain. Existing methods either seek a mixture of distributions across various domains or combine multiple single-source models for weighted fusion in the decision process, with little insight into the distributional discrepancy between different source domains and the target domain. Considering the discrepancies in global and local feature distributions between different domains and the complexity of obtaining category boundaries across domains, this paper proposes a novel Active Dynamic Weighting (ADW) for multi-source domain adaptation. Specifically, to effectively utilize the locally advantageous features in the source domains, ADW designs a multi-source dynamic adjustment mechanism during the training process to dynamically control the degree of feature alignment between each source and target domain in the training batch. In addition, to ensure the cross-domain categories can be distinguished, ADW devises a dynamic boundary loss to guide the model to focus on the hard samples near the decision boundary, which enhances the clarity of the decision boundary and improves the model’s classification ability. Meanwhile, ADW applies active learning to multi-source unsupervised domain adaptation for the first time, guided by dynamic boundary loss, proposes an efficient importance sampling strategy to select target domain hard samples to annotate at a minimal annotation budget, integrates it into the training process, and further refines the domain alignment at the category level. Experiments on various benchmark datasets consistently demonstrate the superiority of our method.
ISSN:0893-6080
1879-2782
1879-2782
DOI:10.1016/j.neunet.2024.106398