Causal importance of low-level feature selectivity for generalization in image recognition

Neural Networks : the Official Journal of the International Neural Network Society
Jumpei Ukita

Abstract

Although our brain and deep neural networks (DNNs) can perform high-level sensory-perception tasks, such as image or speech recognition, the inner mechanism of these hierarchical information-processing systems is poorly understood in both neuroscience and machine learning. Recently, Morcos et al. (2018) examined the effect of class-selective units in DNNs, i.e., units with high-level selectivity, on network generalization, concluding that hidden units that are selectively activated by specific input patterns may harm the network's performance. In this study, we revisited their hypothesis, considering units with selectivity for lower-level features, and argue that selective units are not always harmful to the network performance. Specifically, by using DNNs trained for image classification, we analyzed the orientation selectivity of individual units, a low-level selectivity widely studied in visual neuroscience. We found that orientation-selective units exist in both lower and higher layers of these DNNs, as in our brain. In particular, units in lower layers became more orientation-selective as the generalization performance improved during the course of training. Consistently, networks that generalized better were more orientat...Continue Reading

Citations

Mar 3, 2021·Neural Networks : the Official Journal of the International Neural Network Society·Jin-Woo SeoSeong-Whan Lee

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