Toward Efficient Robust Training against Union of \ell_p Threat Models
–Neural Information Processing Systems
The overwhelming vulnerability of deep neural networks to carefully crafted perturbations known as adversarial attacks has led to the development of various training techniques to produce robust models. While the primary focus of existing approaches has been directed toward addressing the worst-case performance achieved under a single-threat model, it is imperative that safety-critical systems are robust with respect to multiple threat models simultaneously. Existing approaches that address worst-case performance under the union of such threat models ( \ell_{\infty}, \ell_2, \ell_1) either utilize adversarial training methods that require multi-step attacks which are computationally expensive in practice, or rely upon fine-tuning of pre-trained models that are robust with respect to a single-threat model. In this work, we show that by carefully choosing the objective function used for robust training, it is possible to achieve similar, or improved worst-case performance over a union of threat models while utilizing only single-step attacks, thereby achieving a significant reduction in computational resources necessary for training. Furthermore, prior work showed that adversarial training specific to the \ell_1 threat model is relatively difficult, to the extent that even multi-step adversarially trained models were shown to be prone to gradient-masking.
Neural Information Processing Systems
Jan-18-2025, 09:24:59 GMT
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