3,478 research outputs found

    Co-regularized Alignment for Unsupervised Domain Adaptation

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    Deep neural networks, trained with large amount of labeled data, can fail to generalize well when tested with examples from a \emph{target domain} whose distribution differs from the training data distribution, referred as the \emph{source domain}. It can be expensive or even infeasible to obtain required amount of labeled data in all possible domains. Unsupervised domain adaptation sets out to address this problem, aiming to learn a good predictive model for the target domain using labeled examples from the source domain but only unlabeled examples from the target domain. Domain alignment approaches this problem by matching the source and target feature distributions, and has been used as a key component in many state-of-the-art domain adaptation methods. However, matching the marginal feature distributions does not guarantee that the corresponding class conditional distributions will be aligned across the two domains. We propose co-regularized domain alignment for unsupervised domain adaptation, which constructs multiple diverse feature spaces and aligns source and target distributions in each of them individually, while encouraging that alignments agree with each other with regard to the class predictions on the unlabeled target examples. The proposed method is generic and can be used to improve any domain adaptation method which uses domain alignment. We instantiate it in the context of a recent state-of-the-art method and observe that it provides significant performance improvements on several domain adaptation benchmarks.Comment: NIPS 2018 accepted versio

    Illumination coding meets uncertainty learning: toward reliable AI-augmented phase imaging

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    We propose a physics-assisted deep learning (DL) framework for large space-bandwidth product (SBP) phase imaging. We design an asymmetric coded illumination scheme to encode high-resolution phase information across a wide field-of-view. We then develop a matching DL algorithm to provide large-SBP phase estimation. We show that this illumination coding scheme is highly scalable in achieving flexible resolution, and robust to experimental variations. We demonstrate this technique on both static and dynamic biological samples, and show that it can reliably achieve 5X resolution enhancement across 4X FOVs using only five multiplexed measurements -- more than 10X data reduction over the state-of-the-art. Typical DL algorithms tend to provide over-confident predictions, whose errors are only discovered in hindsight. We develop an uncertainty learning framework to overcome this limitation and provide predictive assessment to the reliability of the DL prediction. We show that the predicted uncertainty maps can be used as a surrogate to the true error. We validate the robustness of our technique by analyzing the model uncertainty. We quantify the effect of noise, model errors, incomplete training data, and "out-of-distribution" testing data by assessing the data uncertainty. We further demonstrate that the predicted credibility maps allow identifying spatially and temporally rare biological events. Our technique enables scalable AI-augmented large-SBP phase imaging with dependable predictions.Published versio
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