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DOPING: Generative Data Augmentation for Unsupervised Anomaly Detection with GAN
Recently, the introduction of the generative adversarial network (GAN) and
its variants has enabled the generation of realistic synthetic samples, which
has been used for enlarging training sets. Previous work primarily focused on
data augmentation for semi-supervised and supervised tasks. In this paper, we
instead focus on unsupervised anomaly detection and propose a novel generative
data augmentation framework optimized for this task. In particular, we propose
to oversample infrequent normal samples - normal samples that occur with small
probability, e.g., rare normal events. We show that these samples are
responsible for false positives in anomaly detection. However, oversampling of
infrequent normal samples is challenging for real-world high-dimensional data
with multimodal distributions. To address this challenge, we propose to use a
GAN variant known as the adversarial autoencoder (AAE) to transform the
high-dimensional multimodal data distributions into low-dimensional unimodal
latent distributions with well-defined tail probability. Then, we
systematically oversample at the `edge' of the latent distributions to increase
the density of infrequent normal samples. We show that our oversampling
pipeline is a unified one: it is generally applicable to datasets with
different complex data distributions. To the best of our knowledge, our method
is the first data augmentation technique focused on improving performance in
unsupervised anomaly detection. We validate our method by demonstrating
consistent improvements across several real-world datasets.Comment: Published as a conference paper at ICDM 2018 (IEEE International
Conference on Data Mining
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