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 life-long disentangled representation learning


Life-Long Disentangled Representation Learning with Cross-Domain Latent Homologies

Neural Information Processing Systems

Intelligent behaviour in the real-world requires the ability to acquire new knowledge from an ongoing sequence of experiences while preserving and reusing past knowledge. We propose a novel algorithm for unsupervised representation learning from piece-wise stationary visual data: Variational Autoencoder with Shared Embeddings (VASE). Based on the Minimum Description Length principle, VASE automatically detects shifts in the data distribution and allocates spare representational capacity to new knowledge, while simultaneously protecting previously learnt representations from catastrophic forgetting. Our approach encourages the learnt representations to be disentangled, which imparts a number of desirable properties: VASE can deal sensibly with ambiguous inputs, it can enhance its own representations through imagination-based exploration, and most importantly, it exhibits semantically meaningful sharing of latents between different datasets. Compared to baselines with entangled representations, our approach is able to reason beyond surface-level statistics and perform semantically meaningful cross-domain inference.


Reviews: Life-Long Disentangled Representation Learning with Cross-Domain Latent Homologies

Neural Information Processing Systems

The authors present an algorithm for lifelong representation learning that adapts variational autoencoders to the lifelong learning setting. The framework is presented as a full generative process, where a set of latent factors are (selectively) shared across tasks, and the tasks themselves are generated by an unknown distribution. The algorithm optimizes for the reconstruction error with a regularization based on the MDL principle that has been studied for learning disentangled representations. The algorithm automatically detects distribution shifts (i.e., task changes) and avoids catastrophic forgetting by "hallucinating" data for previous tasks while training on a new one. The authors show empirically that their algorithm is able to extract relevant semantic knowledge from one task and transfer it to the next.


Life-Long Disentangled Representation Learning with Cross-Domain Latent Homologies

Achille, Alessandro, Eccles, Tom, Matthey, Loic, Burgess, Chris, Watters, Nicholas, Lerchner, Alexander, Higgins, Irina

Neural Information Processing Systems

Intelligent behaviour in the real-world requires the ability to acquire new knowledge from an ongoing sequence of experiences while preserving and reusing past knowledge. We propose a novel algorithm for unsupervised representation learning from piece-wise stationary visual data: Variational Autoencoder with Shared Embeddings (VASE). Based on the Minimum Description Length principle, VASE automatically detects shifts in the data distribution and allocates spare representational capacity to new knowledge, while simultaneously protecting previously learnt representations from catastrophic forgetting. Our approach encourages the learnt representations to be disentangled, which imparts a number of desirable properties: VASE can deal sensibly with ambiguous inputs, it can enhance its own representations through imagination-based exploration, and most importantly, it exhibits semantically meaningful sharing of latents between different datasets. Compared to baselines with entangled representations, our approach is able to reason beyond surface-level statistics and perform semantically meaningful cross-domain inference.