Despite widespread adoption of machine learning throughout industry, many firms face a common challenge: relevant datasets are typically distributed amongst market competitors that are reluctant to share information. Recent works propose data markets to provide monetary incentives for collaborative machine learning, where agents share features with each other and are rewarded based on their contribution to improving the predictions others. These contributions are determined by their relative Shapley value, which is computed by treating features as players and their interactions as a characteristic function game. However, in its standard form, this setup further provides an incentive for agents to replicate their data and act under multiple false identities in order to increase their own revenue and diminish that of others, restricting their use in practice. In this work, we develop a replication-robust data market for supervised learning problems. We adopt Pearl's do-calculus from causal reasoning to refine the characteristic function game by differentiating between observational and interventional conditional probabilities. By doing this, we derive Shapley value-based rewards that are robust to this malicious replication by design, whilst preserving desirable market properties.
While federated learning (FL) eliminates the transmission of raw data over a network, it is still vulnerable to privacy breaches from the communicated model parameters. In this work, we propose Multi-Tier Federated Learning with Multi-Tier Differential Privacy (M^2FDP), a DP-enhanced FL methodology for jointly optimizing privacy and performance in hierarchical networks. One of the key concepts of M^2FDP is to extend the concept of HDP towards Multi-Tier Differential Privacy (MDP), while also adapting DP noise injection at different layers of an established FL hierarchy -- edge devices, edge servers, and cloud servers -- according to the trust models within particular subnetworks. We conduct a comprehensive analysis of the convergence behavior of M^2FDP, revealing conditions on parameter tuning under which the training process converges sublinearly to a finite stationarity gap that depends on the network hierarchy, trust model, and target privacy level. Subsequent numerical evaluations demonstrate that M^2FDP obtains substantial improvements in these metrics over baselines for different privacy budgets, and validate the impact of different system configurations.
Offline reinforcement learning learns from a static dataset without interacting with environments, which ensures security and thus owns a good application prospect. However, directly applying naive reinforcement learning algorithm usually fails in an offline environment due to inaccurate Q value approximation caused by out-of-distribution (OOD) state-actions. It is an effective way to solve this problem by penalizing the Q-value of OOD state-actions. Among the methods of punishing OOD state-actions, count-based methods have achieved good results in discrete domains in a simple form. Inspired by it, a novel pseudo-count method for continuous domains called Grid-Mapping Pseudo-Count method (GPC) is proposed by extending the count-based method from discrete to continuous domains. Firstly, the continuous state and action space are mapped to discrete space using Grid-Mapping, then the Q-values of OOD state-actions are constrained through pseudo-count. Secondly, the theoretical proof is given to show that GPC can obtain appropriate uncertainty constraints under fewer assumptions than other pseudo-count methods. Thirdly, GPC is combined with Soft Actor-Critic algorithm (SAC) to get a new algorithm called GPC-SAC. Lastly, experiments on D4RL datasets are given to show that GPC-SAC has better performance and less computational cost than other algorithms that constrain the Q-value.
With the extensive use of machine learning technologies, data providers encounter increasing privacy risks. Recent legislation, such as GDPR, obligates organizations to remove requested data and its influence from a trained model. Machine unlearning is an emerging technique designed to enable machine learning models to erase users' private information. Although several efficient machine unlearning schemes have been proposed, these methods still have limitations. First, removing the contributions of partial data may lead to model performance degradation. Second, discrepancies between the original and generated unlearned models can be exploited by attackers to obtain target sample's information, resulting in additional privacy leakage risks. To address above challenges, we proposed a game-theoretic machine unlearning algorithm that simulates the competitive relationship between unlearning performance and privacy protection. This algorithm comprises unlearning and privacy modules. The unlearning module possesses a loss function composed of model distance and classification error, which is used to derive the optimal strategy. The privacy module aims to make it difficult for an attacker to infer membership information from the unlearned data, thereby reducing the privacy leakage risk during the unlearning process. Additionally, the experimental results on real-world datasets demonstrate that this game-theoretic unlearning algorithm's effectiveness and its ability to generate an unlearned model with a performance similar to that of the retrained one while mitigating extra privacy leakage risks.
A mainstream type of current self-supervised learning methods pursues a general-purpose representation that can be well transferred to downstream tasks, typically by optimizing on a given pretext task such as instance discrimination. In this work, we argue that existing pretext tasks inevitably introduce biases into the learned representation, which in turn leads to biased transfer performance on various downstream tasks. To cope with this issue, we propose Maximum Entropy Coding (MEC), a more principled objective that explicitly optimizes on the structure of the representation, so that the learned representation is less biased and thus generalizes better to unseen downstream tasks. Inspired by the principle of maximum entropy in information theory, we hypothesize that a generalizable representation should be the one that admits the maximum entropy among all plausible representations. To make the objective end-to-end trainable, we propose to leverage the minimal coding length in lossy data coding as a computationally tractable surrogate for the entropy, and further derive a scalable reformulation of the objective that allows fast computation. Extensive experiments demonstrate that MEC learns a more generalizable representation than previous methods based on specific pretext tasks. It achieves state-of-the-art performance consistently on various downstream tasks, including not only ImageNet linear probe, but also semi-supervised classification, object detection, instance segmentation, and object tracking. Interestingly, we show that existing batch-wise and feature-wise self-supervised objectives could be seen equivalent to low-order approximations of MEC. Code and pre-trained models are available at //github.com/xinliu20/MEC.
Despite the recent progress in deep learning, most approaches still go for a silo-like solution, focusing on learning each task in isolation: training a separate neural network for each individual task. Many real-world problems, however, call for a multi-modal approach and, therefore, for multi-tasking models. Multi-task learning (MTL) aims to leverage useful information across tasks to improve the generalization capability of a model. This thesis is concerned with multi-task learning in the context of computer vision. First, we review existing approaches for MTL. Next, we propose several methods that tackle important aspects of multi-task learning. The proposed methods are evaluated on various benchmarks. The results show several advances in the state-of-the-art of multi-task learning. Finally, we discuss several possibilities for future work.
Standard contrastive learning approaches usually require a large number of negatives for effective unsupervised learning and often exhibit slow convergence. We suspect this behavior is due to the suboptimal selection of negatives used for offering contrast to the positives. We counter this difficulty by taking inspiration from support vector machines (SVMs) to present max-margin contrastive learning (MMCL). Our approach selects negatives as the sparse support vectors obtained via a quadratic optimization problem, and contrastiveness is enforced by maximizing the decision margin. As SVM optimization can be computationally demanding, especially in an end-to-end setting, we present simplifications that alleviate the computational burden. We validate our approach on standard vision benchmark datasets, demonstrating better performance in unsupervised representation learning over state-of-the-art, while having better empirical convergence properties.
Recent advances in representation learning have demonstrated an ability to represent information from different modalities such as video, text, and audio in a single high-level embedding vector. In this work we present a self-supervised learning framework that is able to learn a representation that captures finer levels of granularity across different modalities such as concepts or events represented by visual objects or spoken words. Our framework relies on a discretized embedding space created via vector quantization that is shared across different modalities. Beyond the shared embedding space, we propose a Cross-Modal Code Matching objective that forces the representations from different views (modalities) to have a similar distribution over the discrete embedding space such that cross-modal objects/actions localization can be performed without direct supervision. In our experiments we show that the proposed discretized multi-modal fine-grained representation (e.g., pixel/word/frame) can complement high-level summary representations (e.g., video/sentence/waveform) for improved performance on cross-modal retrieval tasks. We also observe that the discretized representation uses individual clusters to represent the same semantic concept across modalities.
Federated learning enables multiple parties to collaboratively train a machine learning model without communicating their local data. A key challenge in federated learning is to handle the heterogeneity of local data distribution across parties. Although many studies have been proposed to address this challenge, we find that they fail to achieve high performance in image datasets with deep learning models. In this paper, we propose MOON: model-contrastive federated learning. MOON is a simple and effective federated learning framework. The key idea of MOON is to utilize the similarity between model representations to correct the local training of individual parties, i.e., conducting contrastive learning in model-level. Our extensive experiments show that MOON significantly outperforms the other state-of-the-art federated learning algorithms on various image classification tasks.
The essence of multivariate sequential learning is all about how to extract dependencies in data. These data sets, such as hourly medical records in intensive care units and multi-frequency phonetic time series, often time exhibit not only strong serial dependencies in the individual components (the "marginal" memory) but also non-negligible memories in the cross-sectional dependencies (the "joint" memory). Because of the multivariate complexity in the evolution of the joint distribution that underlies the data generating process, we take a data-driven approach and construct a novel recurrent network architecture, termed Memory-Gated Recurrent Networks (mGRN), with gates explicitly regulating two distinct types of memories: the marginal memory and the joint memory. Through a combination of comprehensive simulation studies and empirical experiments on a range of public datasets, we show that our proposed mGRN architecture consistently outperforms state-of-the-art architectures targeting multivariate time series.
Knowledge graphs (KGs) serve as useful resources for various natural language processing applications. Previous KG completion approaches require a large number of training instances (i.e., head-tail entity pairs) for every relation. The real case is that for most of the relations, very few entity pairs are available. Existing work of one-shot learning limits method generalizability for few-shot scenarios and does not fully use the supervisory information; however, few-shot KG completion has not been well studied yet. In this work, we propose a novel few-shot relation learning model (FSRL) that aims at discovering facts of new relations with few-shot references. FSRL can effectively capture knowledge from heterogeneous graph structure, aggregate representations of few-shot references, and match similar entity pairs of reference set for every relation. Extensive experiments on two public datasets demonstrate that FSRL outperforms the state-of-the-art.