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 anomalous region


Sparse, self-organizing ensembles of local kernels detect rare statistical anomalies

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Modern artificial intelligence has revolutionized our ability to extract rich and versatile data representations across scientific disciplines. Yet, the statistical properties of these representations remain poorly controlled, causing misspecified anomaly detection (AD) methods to falter. Weak or rare signals can remain hidden within the apparent regularity of normal data, creating a gap in our ability to detect and interpret anomalies. We examine this gap and identify a set of structural desiderata for detection methods operating under minimal prior information: sparsity, to enforce parsimony; locality, to preserve geometric sensitivity; and competition, to promote efficient allocation of model capacity. These principles define a class of self-organizing local kernels that adaptively partition the representation space around regions of statistical imbalance. As an instantiation of these principles, we introduce SparKer, a sparse ensemble of Gaussian kernels trained within a semi-supervised Neyman--Pearson framework to locally model the likelihood ratio between a sample that may contain anomalies and a nominal, anomaly-free reference. We provide theoretical insights into the mechanisms that drive detection and self-organization in the proposed model, and demonstrate the effectiveness of this approach on realistic high-dimensional problems of scientific discovery, open-world novelty detection, intrusion detection, and generative-model validation. Our applications span both the natural- and computer-science domains. We demonstrate that ensembles containing only a handful of kernels can identify statistically significant anomalous locations within representation spaces of thousands of dimensions, underscoring both the interpretability, efficiency and scalability of the proposed approach.


MIAS-SAM: Medical Image Anomaly Segmentation without thresholding

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

This paper presents MIAS-SAM, a novel approach for the segmentation of anomalous regions in medical images. MIAS-SAM uses a patch-based memory bank to store relevant image features, which are extracted from normal data using the SAM encoder. At inference time, the embedding patches extracted from the SAM encoder are compared with those in the memory bank to obtain the anomaly map. Finally, MIAS-SAM computes the center of gravity of the anomaly map to prompt the SAM decoder, obtaining an accurate segmentation from the previously extracted features. Differently from prior works, MIAS-SAM does not require to define a threshold value to obtain the segmentation from the anomaly map. Experimental results conducted on three publicly available datasets, each with a different imaging modality (Brain MRI, Liver CT, and Retina OCT) show accurate anomaly segmentation capabilities measured using DICE score. The code is available at: https://github.com/warpcut/MIAS-SAM


View-Invariant Pixelwise Anomaly Detection in Multi-object Scenes with Adaptive View Synthesis

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The inspection and monitoring of infrastructure assets typically requires identifying visual anomalies in scenes periodically photographed over time. Images collected manually or with robots such as unmanned aerial vehicles from the same scene at different instances in time are typically not perfectly aligned. Supervised segmentation methods can be applied to identify known problems, but unsupervised anomaly detection approaches are required when unknown anomalies occur. Current unsupervised pixel-level anomaly detection methods have mainly been developed for industrial settings where the camera position is known and constant. However, we find that these methods fail to generalize to the case when images are not perfectly aligned. We term the problem of unsupervised anomaly detection between two such imperfectly aligned sets of images as Scene Anomaly Detection (Scene AD). We present a novel network termed OmniAD to address the Scene AD problem posed. Specifically, we refine the anomaly detection method reverse distillation to achieve a 40% increase in pixel-level anomaly detection performance. The network's performance is further demonstrated to improve with two new data augmentation strategies proposed that leverage novel view synthesis and camera localization to improve generalization. We validate our approach with qualitative and quantitative results on a new dataset, ToyCity, the first Scene AD dataset with multiple objects, as well as on the established single object-centric dataset, MAD. https://drags99.github.io/OmniAD/


Reconstruction-Based Anomaly Localization via Knowledge-Informed Self-Training

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Anomaly localization, which involves localizing anomalous regions within images, is a significant industrial task. Reconstruction-based methods are widely adopted for anomaly localization because of their low complexity and high interpretability. Most existing reconstruction-based methods only use normal samples to construct model. If anomalous samples are appropriately utilized in the process of anomaly localization, the localization performance can be improved. However, usually only weakly labeled anomalous samples are available, which limits the improvement. In many cases, we can obtain some knowledge of anomalies summarized by domain experts. Taking advantage of such knowledge can help us better utilize the anomalous samples and thus further improve the localization performance. In this paper, we propose a novel reconstruction-based method named knowledge-informed self-training (KIST) which integrates knowledge into reconstruction model through self-training. Specifically, KIST utilizes weakly labeled anomalous samples in addition to the normal ones and exploits knowledge to yield pixel-level pseudo-labels of the anomalous samples. Based on the pseudo labels, a novel loss which promotes the reconstruction of normal pixels while suppressing the reconstruction of anomalous pixels is used. We conduct experiments on different datasets and demonstrate the advantages of KIST over the existing reconstruction-based methods.


Self-Supervised Training with Autoencoders for Visual Anomaly Detection

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Recently, deep auto-encoders have been used for the task of anomaly detection in the visual domain. By optimising for the reconstruction error using anomaly-free examples, the common belief is that a corresponding network should fail to accurately reconstruct anomalous regions in the application phase. This goal is typically addressed by controlling the capacity of the network, either by reducing the size of the bottleneck layer or by enforcing sparsity constraints on its activations. However, neither of these techniques does explicitly penalise reconstruction of anomalous signals often resulting in poor detection. We tackle this problem by adapting a self-supervised learning regime that allows the use of discriminative information during training but focuses on the data manifold of normal examples. Precisely, we investigate two different training objectives inspired by the task of neural image inpainting. Our main objective regularises the model to produce locally consistent reconstructions, while replacing irregularities, therefore, acting as a filter that removes anomalous patterns. Our formal analysis shows that under mild conditions the corresponding model resembles a non-linear orthogonal projection of partially corrupted images onto the manifold of uncorrupted (defect-free) examples. This insight makes the reconstruction error a natural choice for defining the anomaly score of a sample according to its distance from a corresponding projection on the data manifold. We emphasise that inference with our approach is very efficient during training and prediction requiring a single forward pass for each input image. Our experiments on the MVTec AD dataset demonstrate high detection and localisation performance. On the texture-subset, in particular, our approach consistently outperforms recent anomaly detection methods by a significant margin.


Excision And Recovery: Visual Defect Obfuscation Based Self-Supervised Anomaly Detection Strategy

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Due to scarcity of anomaly situations in the early manufacturing stage, an unsupervised anomaly detection (UAD) approach is widely adopted which only uses normal samples for training. This approach is based on the assumption that the trained UAD model will accurately reconstruct normal patterns but struggles with unseen anomalous patterns. To enhance the UAD performance, reconstruction-by-inpainting based methods have recently been investigated, especially on the masking strategy of suspected defective regions. However, there are still issues to overcome: 1) time-consuming inference due to multiple masking, 2) output inconsistency by random masking strategy, and 3) inaccurate reconstruction of normal patterns when the masked area is large. Motivated by this, we propose a novel reconstruction-by-inpainting method, dubbed Excision And Recovery (EAR), that features single deterministic masking based on the ImageNet pre-trained DINO-ViT and visual obfuscation for hint-providing. Experimental results on the MVTec AD dataset show that deterministic masking by pre-trained attention effectively cuts out suspected defective regions and resolve the aforementioned issues 1 and 2. Also, hint-providing by mosaicing proves to enhance the UAD performance than emptying those regions by binary masking, thereby overcomes issue 3. Our approach achieves a high UAD performance without any change of the neural network structure. Thus, we suggest that EAR be adopted in various manufacturing industries as a practically deployable solution.


Reversing the Abnormal: Pseudo-Healthy Generative Networks for Anomaly Detection

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Early and accurate disease detection is crucial for patient management and successful treatment outcomes. However, the automatic identification of anomalies in medical images can be challenging. Conventional methods rely on large labeled datasets which are difficult to obtain. To overcome these limitations, we introduce a novel unsupervised approach, called PHANES (Pseudo Healthy generative networks for ANomaly Segmentation). Our method has the capability of reversing anomalies, i.e., preserving healthy tissue and replacing anomalous regions with pseudo-healthy (PH) reconstructions. Unlike recent diffusion models, our method does not rely on a learned noise distribution nor does it introduce random alterations to the entire image. Instead, we use latent generative networks to create masks around possible anomalies, which are refined using inpainting generative networks. We demonstrate the effectiveness of PHANES in detecting stroke lesions in T1w brain MRI datasets and show significant improvements over state-of-the-art (SOTA) methods. We believe that our proposed framework will open new avenues for interpretable, fast, and accurate anomaly segmentation with the potential to support various clinical-oriented downstream tasks.


Deep Autoencoders for Anomaly Detection in Textured Images using CW-SSIM

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Detecting anomalous regions in images is a frequently encountered problem in industrial monitoring. A relevant example is the analysis of tissues and other products that in normal conditions conform to a specific texture, while defects introduce changes in the normal pattern. We address the anomaly detection problem by training a deep autoencoder, and we show that adopting a loss function based on Complex Wavelet Structural Similarity (CW-SSIM) yields superior detection performance on this type of images compared to traditional autoencoder loss functions. Our experiments on well-known anomaly detection benchmarks show that a simple model trained with this loss function can achieve comparable or superior performance to state-of-the-art methods leveraging deeper, larger and more computationally demanding neural networks.


Semi-supervised Anomaly Detection using Auto Encoders

#artificialintelligence

In this article, I'll be discussing a paper [1] that proposes an AutoEncoder based approach for the task of semi-supervised anomaly detection. If you want to look at the GitHub repository link, results and conclusion directly, please scroll to the bottom of the article. Anomaly detection refers to the task of finding unusual instances that stand out from the normal data [1]. The non-conforming patterns can be referred to using different names depending on the application area/domain, such as anomalies, outliers, exceptions, defects, containments, etc. [2] In several applications, these outliers or anomalous samples are of greater interest compared to the normal ones. Specifically in the case of industrial surface inspection and infrastructure asset management, finding defects (anomalous regions) is of extreme importance.


AKM$^2$D : An Adaptive Framework for Online Sensing and Anomaly Quantification

arXiv.org Machine Learning

In point-based sensing systems such as coordinate measuring machines (CMM) and laser ultrasonics where complete sensing is impractical due to the high sensing time and cost, adaptive sensing through a systematic exploration is vital for online inspection and anomaly quantification. Most of the existing sequential sampling methodologies focus on reducing the overall fitting error for the entire sampling space. However, in many anomaly quantification applications, the main goal is to estimate sparse anomalous regions in the pixel-level accurately. In this paper, we develop a novel framework named Adaptive Kernelized Maximum-Minimum Distance AKM$^2$D to speed up the inspection and anomaly detection process through an intelligent sequential sampling scheme integrated with fast estimation and detection. The proposed method balances the sampling efforts between the space-filling sampling (exploration) and focused sampling near the anomalous region (exploitation). The proposed methodology is validated by conducting simulations and a case study of anomaly detection in composite sheets using a guided wave test.