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Filip Szatkowski, Mateusz Pyla, Marcin Przewięzlikowski, Sebastian Cygert, Bartłomiej Twardowski, & Tomasz Trzcinski. (2023). Adapt Your Teacher: Improving Knowledge Distillation for Exemplar-Free Continual Learning. In Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV) Workshops (pp. 3512–3517).
Abstract: In this work, we investigate exemplar-free class incremental learning (CIL) with knowledge distillation (KD) as a regularization strategy, aiming to prevent forgetting. KD-based methods are successfully used in CIL, but they often struggle to regularize the model without access to exemplars of the training data from previous tasks. Our analysis reveals that this issue originates from substantial representation shifts in the teacher network when dealing with out-of-distribution data. This causes large errors in the KD loss component, leading to performance degradation in CIL. Inspired by recent test-time adaptation methods, we introduce Teacher Adaptation (TA), a method that concurrently updates the teacher and the main model during incremental training. Our method seamlessly integrates with KD-based CIL approaches and allows for consistent enhancement of their performance across multiple exemplar-free CIL benchmarks.
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Fei Yang, Kai Wang, & Joost Van de Weijer. (2023). ScrollNet: DynamicWeight Importance for Continual Learning. In Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV) Workshops (pp. 3345–3355).
Abstract: The principle underlying most existing continual learning (CL) methods is to prioritize stability by penalizing changes in parameters crucial to old tasks, while allowing for plasticity in other parameters. The importance of weights for each task can be determined either explicitly through learning a task-specific mask during training (e.g., parameter isolation-based approaches) or implicitly by introducing a regularization term (e.g., regularization-based approaches). However, all these methods assume that the importance of weights for each task is unknown prior to data exposure. In this paper, we propose ScrollNet as a scrolling neural network for continual learning. ScrollNet can be seen as a dynamic network that assigns the ranking of weight importance for each task before data exposure, thus achieving a more favorable stability-plasticity tradeoff during sequential task learning by reassigning this ranking for different tasks. Additionally, we demonstrate that ScrollNet can be combined with various CL methods, including regularization-based and replay-based approaches. Experimental results on CIFAR100 and TinyImagenet datasets show the effectiveness of our proposed method.
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Soumya Jahagirdar, Minesh Mathew, Dimosthenis Karatzas, & CV Jawahar. (2023). Understanding Video Scenes Through Text: Insights from Text-Based Video Question Answering. In Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV) Workshops.
Abstract: Researchers have extensively studied the field of vision and language, discovering that both visual and textual content is crucial for understanding scenes effectively. Particularly, comprehending text in videos holds great significance, requiring both scene text understanding and temporal reasoning. This paper focuses on exploring two recently introduced datasets, NewsVideoQA and M4-ViteVQA, which aim to address video question answering based on textual content. The NewsVideoQA dataset contains question-answer pairs related to the text in news videos, while M4- ViteVQA comprises question-answer pairs from diverse categories like vlogging, traveling, and shopping. We provide an analysis of the formulation of these datasets on various levels, exploring the degree of visual understanding and multi-frame comprehension required for answering the questions. Additionally, the study includes experimentation with BERT-QA, a text-only model, which demonstrates comparable performance to the original methods on both datasets, indicating the shortcomings in the formulation of these datasets. Furthermore, we also look into the domain adaptation aspect by examining the effectiveness of training on M4-ViteVQA and evaluating on NewsVideoQA and vice-versa, thereby shedding light on the challenges and potential benefits of out-of-domain training.
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Dawid Rymarczyk, Joost van de Weijer, Bartosz Zielinski, & Bartlomiej Twardowski. (2023). ICICLE: Interpretable Class Incremental Continual Learning. Dawid Rymarczyk. In 20th IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision (pp. 1887–1898).
Abstract: Continual learning enables incremental learning of new tasks without forgetting those previously learned, resulting in positive knowledge transfer that can enhance performance on both new and old tasks. However, continual learning poses new challenges for interpretability, as the rationale behind model predictions may change over time, leading to interpretability concept drift. We address this problem by proposing Interpretable Class-InCremental LEarning (ICICLE), an exemplar-free approach that adopts a prototypical part-based approach. It consists of three crucial novelties: interpretability regularization that distills previously learned concepts while preserving user-friendly positive reasoning; proximity-based prototype initialization strategy dedicated to the fine-grained setting; and task-recency bias compensation devoted to prototypical parts. Our experimental results demonstrate that ICICLE reduces the interpretability concept drift and outperforms the existing exemplar-free methods of common class-incremental learning when applied to concept-based models.
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Jordy Van Landeghem, Ruben Tito, Lukasz Borchmann, Michal Pietruszka, Pawel Joziak, Rafal Powalski, et al. (2023). Document Understanding Dataset and Evaluation (DUDE). In 20th IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision (pp. 19528–19540).
Abstract: We call on the Document AI (DocAI) community to re-evaluate current methodologies and embrace the challenge of creating more practically-oriented benchmarks. Document Understanding Dataset and Evaluation (DUDE) seeks to remediate the halted research progress in understanding visually-rich documents (VRDs). We present a new dataset with novelties related to types of questions, answers, and document layouts based on multi-industry, multi-domain, and multi-page VRDs of various origins and dates. Moreover, we are pushing the boundaries of current methods by creating multi-task and multi-domain evaluation setups that more accurately simulate real-world situations where powerful generalization and adaptation under low-resource settings are desired. DUDE aims to set a new standard as a more practical, long-standing benchmark for the community, and we hope that it will lead to future extensions and contributions that address real-world challenges. Finally, our work illustrates the importance of finding more efficient ways to model language, images, and layout in DocAI.
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Yuyang Liu, Yang Cong, Dipam Goswami, Xialei Liu, & Joost Van de Weijer. (2023). Augmented Box Replay: Overcoming Foreground Shift for Incremental Object Detection. In 20th IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision (pp. 11367–11377).
Abstract: In incremental learning, replaying stored samples from previous tasks together with current task samples is one of the most efficient approaches to address catastrophic forgetting. However, unlike incremental classification, image replay has not been successfully applied to incremental object detection (IOD). In this paper, we identify the overlooked problem of foreground shift as the main reason for this. Foreground shift only occurs when replaying images of previous tasks and refers to the fact that their background might contain foreground objects of the current task. To overcome this problem, a novel and efficient Augmented Box Replay (ABR) method is developed that only stores and replays foreground objects and thereby circumvents the foreground shift problem. In addition, we propose an innovative Attentive RoI Distillation loss that uses spatial attention from region-of-interest (RoI) features to constrain current model to focus on the most important information from old model. ABR significantly reduces forgetting of previous classes while maintaining high plasticity in current classes. Moreover, it considerably reduces the storage requirements when compared to standard image replay. Comprehensive experiments on Pascal-VOC and COCO datasets support the state-of-the-art performance of our model.
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Guillermo Torres, Debora Gil, Antoni Rosell, S. Mena, & Carles Sanchez. (2023). Virtual Radiomics Biopsy for the Histological Diagnosis of Pulmonary Nodules. In 37th International Congress and Exhibition is organized by Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery.
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Sonia Baeza, Debora Gil, Carles Sanchez, Guillermo Torres, Ignasi Garcia Olive, Ignasi Guasch, et al. (2023). Biopsia virtual radiomica para el diagnóstico histológico de nódulos pulmonares – Resultados intermedios del proyecto Radiolung. In SEPAR.
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Debora Gil, Guillermo Torres, & Carles Sanchez. (2023). Transforming radiomic features into radiological words. In IEEE International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging.
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Pau Cano, Debora Gil, & Eva Musulen. (2023). Towards automatic detection of helicobacter pylori in histological samples of gastric tissue. In IEEE International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging.
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Guillermo Torres, Debora Gil, Antonio Rosell, Sonia Baeza, & Carles Sanchez. (2023). A radiomic biopsy for virtual histology of pulmonary nodules. In IEEE International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging.
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Jun Wan, Guodong Guo, Sergio Escalera, Hugo Jair Escalante, & Stan Z Li. (2023). Advances in Face Presentation Attack Detection.
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Jun Wan, Guodong Guo, Sergio Escalera, Hugo Jair Escalante, & Stan Z Li. (2023). Face Presentation Attack Detection (PAD) Challenges. In Advances in Face Presentation Attack Detection (17–35). SLCV.
Abstract: In recent years, the security of face recognition systems has been increasingly threatened. Face Anti-spoofing (FAS) is essential to secure face recognition systems primarily from various attacks. In order to attract researchers and push forward the state of the art in Face Presentation Attack Detection (PAD), we organized three editions of Face Anti-spoofing Workshop and Competition at CVPR 2019, CVPR 2020, and ICCV 2021, which have attracted more than 800 teams from academia and industry, and greatly promoted the algorithms to overcome many challenging problems. In this chapter, we introduce the detailed competition process, including the challenge phases, timeline and evaluation metrics. Along with the workshop, we will introduce the corresponding dataset for each competition including data acquisition details, data processing, statistics, and evaluation protocol. Finally, we provide the available link to download the datasets used in the challenges.
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Jun Wan, Guodong Guo, Sergio Escalera, Hugo Jair Escalante, & Stan Z Li. (2023). Face Anti-spoofing Progress Driven by Academic Challenges. In Advances in Face Presentation Attack Detection (1–15). SLCV.
Abstract: With the ubiquity of facial authentication systems and the prevalence of security cameras around the world, the impact that facial presentation attack techniques may have is huge. However, research progress in this field has been slowed by a number of factors, including the lack of appropriate and realistic datasets, ethical and privacy issues that prevent the recording and distribution of facial images, the little attention that the community has given to potential ethnic biases among others. This chapter provides an overview of contributions derived from the organization of academic challenges in the context of face anti-spoofing detection. Specifically, we discuss the limitations of benchmarks and summarize our efforts in trying to boost research by the community via the participation in academic challenges
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Jun Wan, Guodong Guo, Sergio Escalera, Hugo Jair Escalante, & Stan Z Li. (2023). Best Solutions Proposed in the Context of the Face Anti-spoofing Challenge Series. In Advances in Face Presentation Attack Detection (37–78).
Abstract: The PAD competitions we organized attracted more than 835 teams from home and abroad, most of them from the industry, which shows that the topic of face anti-spoofing is closely related to daily life, and there is an urgent need for advanced algorithms to solve its application needs. Specifically, the Chalearn LAP multi-modal face anti-spoofing attack detection challenge attracted more than 300 teams for the development phase with a total of 13 teams qualifying for the final round; the Chalearn Face Anti-spoofing Attack Detection Challenge attracted 340 teams in the development stage, and finally, 11 and 8 teams have submitted their codes in the single-modal and multi-modal face anti-spoofing recognition challenges, respectively; the 3D High-Fidelity Mask Face Presentation Attack Detection Challenge attracted 195 teams for the development phase with a total of 18 teams qualifying for the final round. All the results were verified and re-run by the organizing team, and the results were used for the final ranking. In this chapter, we briefly the methods developed by the teams participating in each competition, and introduce the algorithm details of the top-three ranked teams in detail.
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