8,793 research outputs found
Methods for Interpreting and Understanding Deep Neural Networks
This paper provides an entry point to the problem of interpreting a deep
neural network model and explaining its predictions. It is based on a tutorial
given at ICASSP 2017. It introduces some recently proposed techniques of
interpretation, along with theory, tricks and recommendations, to make most
efficient use of these techniques on real data. It also discusses a number of
practical applications.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figure
Unmasking Clever Hans Predictors and Assessing What Machines Really Learn
Current learning machines have successfully solved hard application problems,
reaching high accuracy and displaying seemingly "intelligent" behavior. Here we
apply recent techniques for explaining decisions of state-of-the-art learning
machines and analyze various tasks from computer vision and arcade games. This
showcases a spectrum of problem-solving behaviors ranging from naive and
short-sighted, to well-informed and strategic. We observe that standard
performance evaluation metrics can be oblivious to distinguishing these diverse
problem solving behaviors. Furthermore, we propose our semi-automated Spectral
Relevance Analysis that provides a practically effective way of characterizing
and validating the behavior of nonlinear learning machines. This helps to
assess whether a learned model indeed delivers reliably for the problem that it
was conceived for. Furthermore, our work intends to add a voice of caution to
the ongoing excitement about machine intelligence and pledges to evaluate and
judge some of these recent successes in a more nuanced manner.Comment: Accepted for publication in Nature Communication
Unsupervised Video Understanding by Reconciliation of Posture Similarities
Understanding human activity and being able to explain it in detail surpasses
mere action classification by far in both complexity and value. The challenge
is thus to describe an activity on the basis of its most fundamental
constituents, the individual postures and their distinctive transitions.
Supervised learning of such a fine-grained representation based on elementary
poses is very tedious and does not scale. Therefore, we propose a completely
unsupervised deep learning procedure based solely on video sequences, which
starts from scratch without requiring pre-trained networks, predefined body
models, or keypoints. A combinatorial sequence matching algorithm proposes
relations between frames from subsets of the training data, while a CNN is
reconciling the transitivity conflicts of the different subsets to learn a
single concerted pose embedding despite changes in appearance across sequences.
Without any manual annotation, the model learns a structured representation of
postures and their temporal development. The model not only enables retrieval
of similar postures but also temporal super-resolution. Additionally, based on
a recurrent formulation, next frames can be synthesized.Comment: Accepted by ICCV 201
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