distribution adaptation
HSVA: Hierarchical Semantic-Visual Adaptation for Zero-Shot Learning
Zero-shot learning (ZSL) tackles the unseen class recognition problem, transferring semantic knowledge from seen classes to unseen ones. Typically, to guarantee desirable knowledge transfer, a common (latent) space is adopted for associating the visual and semantic domains in ZSL. However, existing common space learning methods align the semantic and visual domains by merely mitigating distribution disagreement through one-step adaptation. This strategy is usually ineffective due to the heterogeneous nature of the feature representations in the two domains, which intrinsically contain both distribution and structure variations. To address this and advance ZSL, we propose a novel hierarchical semantic-visual adaptation (HSVA) framework.
HSVA: Hierarchical Semantic-Visual Adaptation for Zero-Shot Learning
Zero-shot learning (ZSL) tackles the unseen class recognition problem, transferring semantic knowledge from seen classes to unseen ones. Typically, to guarantee desirable knowledge transfer, a common (latent) space is adopted for associating the visual and semantic domains in ZSL. However, existing common space learning methods align the semantic and visual domains by merely mitigating distribution disagreement through one-step adaptation. This strategy is usually ineffective due to the heterogeneous nature of the feature representations in the two domains, which intrinsically contain both distribution and structure variations. To address this and advance ZSL, we propose a novel hierarchical semantic-visual adaptation (HSVA) framework.
Improving Speaker-independent Speech Emotion Recognition Using Dynamic Joint Distribution Adaptation
Lu, Cheng, Zong, Yuan, Lian, Hailun, Zhao, Yan, Schuller, Bjรถrn, Zheng, Wenming
In speaker-independent speech emotion recognition, the training and testing samples are collected from diverse speakers, leading to a multi-domain shift challenge across the feature distributions of data from different speakers. Consequently, when the trained model is confronted with data from new speakers, its performance tends to degrade. To address the issue, we propose a Dynamic Joint Distribution Adaptation (DJDA) method under the framework of multi-source domain adaptation. DJDA firstly utilizes joint distribution adaptation (JDA), involving marginal distribution adaptation (MDA) and conditional distribution adaptation (CDA), to more precisely measure the multi-domain distribution shifts caused by different speakers. This helps eliminate speaker bias in emotion features, allowing for learning discriminative and speaker-invariant speech emotion features from coarse-level to fine-level. Furthermore, we quantify the adaptation contributions of MDA and CDA within JDA by using a dynamic balance factor based on $\mathcal{A}$-Distance, promoting to effectively handle the unknown distributions encountered in data from new speakers. Experimental results demonstrate the superior performance of our DJDA as compared to other state-of-the-art (SOTA) methods.
A Fuzzy-set-based Joint Distribution Adaptation Method for Regression and its Application to Online Damage Quantification for Structural Digital Twin
Zhou, Xuan, Sbarufatti, Claudio, Giglio, Marco, Dong, Leiting
Online damage quantification suffers from insufficient labeled data that weakens its accuracy. In this context, adopting the domain adaptation on historical labeled data from similar structures/damages or simulated digital twin data to assist the current diagnosis task would be beneficial. However, most domain adaptation methods are designed for classification and cannot efficiently address damage quantification, a regression problem with continuous real-valued labels. This study first proposes a novel domain adaptation method, the Online Fuzzy-set-based Joint Distribution Adaptation for Regression, to address this challenge. By converting the continuous real-valued labels to fuzzy class labels via fuzzy sets, the marginal and conditional distribution discrepancy are simultaneously measured to achieve the domain adaptation for the damage quantification task. Thanks to the superiority of the proposed method, a state-of-the-art online damage quantification framework based on domain adaptation is presented. Finally, the framework has been comprehensively demonstrated with a damaged helicopter panel, in which three types of damage domain adaptations (across different damage locations, across different damage types, and from simulation to experiment) are all conducted, proving the accuracy of damage quantification can be significantly improved in a realistic environment. It is expected that the proposed approach to be applied to the fleet-level digital twin considering the individual differences.
A Framework for Supervised Heterogeneous Transfer Learning using Dynamic Distribution Adaptation and Manifold Regularization
Rahman, Md Geaur, Islam, Md Zahidul
Transfer learning aims to learn classifiers for a target domain by transferring knowledge from a source domain. However, due to two main issues: feature discrepancy and distribution divergence, transfer learning can be a very difficult problem in practice. In this paper, we present a framework called TLF that builds a classifier for the target domain having only few labeled training records by transferring knowledge from the source domain having many labeled records. While existing methods often focus on one issue and leave the other one for the further work, TLF is capable of handling both issues simultaneously. In TLF, we alleviate feature discrepancy by identifying shared label distributions that act as the pivots to bridge the domains. We handle distribution divergence by simultaneously optimizing the structural risk functional, joint distributions between domains, and the manifold consistency underlying marginal distributions. Moreover, for the manifold consistency we exploit its intrinsic properties by identifying k nearest neighbors of a record, where the value of k is determined automatically in TLF. Furthermore, since negative transfer is not desired, we consider only the source records that are belonging to the source pivots during the knowledge transfer. We evaluate TLF on seven publicly available natural datasets and compare the performance of TLF against the performance of eleven state-of-the-art techniques. We also evaluate the effectiveness of TLF in some challenging situations. Our experimental results, including statistical sign test and Nemenyi test analyses, indicate a clear superiority of the proposed framework over the state-of-the-art techniques.
Transferability versus Discriminability: Joint Probability Distribution Adaptation (JPDA)
Transfer learning makes use of data or knowledge in one task to help solve a different, yet related, task. Many ex isting TL approaches are based on a joint probability distribution metric, which is a weighted sum of the marginal distribution and the c ondi-tional distribution; however, they optimize the two distri butions independently, and ignore their intrinsic dependency. This p aper proposes a novel and frustratingly easy Joint Probability Dist ribution Adaptation (JPDA) approach, to replace the frequently-use d joint maximum mean discrepancy metric in transfer learning. Duri ng the distribution adaptation, JPDA improves the transferabili ty between the source and the target domains by minimizing the joint pro b-ability discrepancy of the corresponding class, and also in creases the discriminability between different classes by maximiz ing their joint probability discrepancy. Experiments on six image cl assifica-tion datasets demonstrated that JPDA outperforms several s tate-of- the-art metric-based transfer learning approaches.
Balanced Distribution Adaptation for Transfer Learning
Wang, Jindong, Chen, Yiqiang, Hao, Shuji, Feng, Wenjie, Shen, Zhiqi
Transfer learning has achieved promising results by leveraging knowledge from the source domain to annotate the target domain which has few or none labels. Existing methods often seek to minimize the distribution divergence between domains, such as the marginal distribution, the conditional distribution or both. However, these two distances are often treated equally in existing algorithms, which will result in poor performance in real applications. Moreover, existing methods usually assume that the dataset is balanced, which also limits their performances on imbalanced tasks that are quite common in real problems. To tackle the distribution adaptation problem, in this paper, we propose a novel transfer learning approach, named as Balanced Distribution \underline{A}daptation~(BDA), which can adaptively leverage the importance of the marginal and conditional distribution discrepancies, and several existing methods can be treated as special cases of BDA. Based on BDA, we also propose a novel Weighted Balanced Distribution Adaptation~(W-BDA) algorithm to tackle the class imbalance issue in transfer learning. W-BDA not only considers the distribution adaptation between domains but also adaptively changes the weight of each class. To evaluate the proposed methods, we conduct extensive experiments on several transfer learning tasks, which demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed algorithms over several state-of-the-art methods.
Deep Transfer Network with Joint Distribution Adaptation: A New Intelligent Fault Diagnosis Framework for Industry Application
Han, Te, Liu, Chao, Yang, Wenguang, Jiang, Dongxiang
In recent years, an increasing popularity of deep learning model for intelligent condition monitoring and diagnosis as well as prognostics used for mechanical systems and structures has been observed. In the previous studies, however, a major assumption accepted by default, is that the training and testing data are taking from same feature distribution. Unfortunately, this assumption is mostly invalid in real application, resulting in a certain lack of applicability for the traditional diagnosis approaches. Inspired by the idea of transfer learning that leverages the knowledge learnt from rich labeled data in source domain to facilitate diagnosing a new but similar target task, a new intelligent fault diagnosis framework, i.e., deep transfer network (DTN), which generalizes deep learning model to domain adaptation scenario, is proposed in this paper. By extending the marginal distribution adaptation (MDA) to joint distribution adaptation (JDA), the proposed framework can exploit the discrimination structures associated with the labeled data in source domain to adapt the conditional distribution of unlabeled target data, and thus guarantee a more accurate distribution matching. Extensive empirical evaluations on three fault datasets validate the applicability and practicability of DTN, while achieving many state-of-the-art transfer results in terms of diverse operating conditions, fault severities and fault types.