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 mnist fashion dataset


Machine Unlearning using Forgetting Neural Networks

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Modern computer systems store vast amounts of personal data, enabling advances in AI and ML but risking user privacy and trust. For privacy reasons, it is desired sometimes for an ML model to forget part of the data it was trained on. This paper presents a new approach to machine unlearning using forgetting neural networks (FNN). FNNs are neural networks with specific forgetting layers, that take inspiration from the processes involved when a human brain forgets. While FNNs had been proposed as a theoretical construct, they have not been previously used as a machine unlearning method. We describe four different types of forgetting layers and study their properties. In our experimental evaluation, we report our results on the MNIST handwritten digit recognition and fashion datasets. The effectiveness of the unlearned models was tested using Membership Inference Attacks (MIA). Successful experimental results demonstrate the great potential of our proposed method for dealing with the machine unlearning problem.


Generative Adversarial Networks(GANs) with MNIST Fashion Dataset

#artificialintelligence

In this article, we use the MNIST fashion dataset as input data to generate more images. We create a simple model with linear layers, GANs could be way more complicated. Though a GAN has 4 layers.


Training Federated GANs with Theoretical Guarantees: A Universal Aggregation Approach

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Recently, Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) have demonstrated their potential in federated learning, i.e., learning a centralized model from data privately hosted by multiple sites. A federatedGAN jointly trains a centralized generator and multiple private discriminators hosted at different sites. A major theoretical challenge for the federated GAN is the heterogeneity of the local data distributions. Traditional approaches cannot guarantee to learn the target distribution, which isa mixture of the highly different local distributions. This paper tackles this theoretical challenge, and for the first time, provides a provably correct framework for federated GAN. We propose a new approach called Universal Aggregation, which simulates a centralized discriminator via carefully aggregating the mixture of all private discriminators. We prove that a generator trained with this simulated centralized discriminator can learn the desired target distribution. Through synthetic and real datasets, we show that our method can learn the mixture of largely different distributions where existing federated GAN methods fail.