Association Graph Learning for Multi-Task Classification with Category Shifts

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2023
Host editors
  • S. Koyejo
  • S. Mohamed
  • A. Agarwal
  • D. Belgrave
  • K. Cho
  • A. Oh
Book title 36th Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS 2022)
Book subtitle New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, 28 November-9 December 2022
ISBN
  • 9781713871088
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9781713873129
Series Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems
Event Thirty-sixth Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems
Volume | Issue number 7
Pages (from-to) 4503-4516
Publisher San Diego, CA: Neural Information Processing Systems Foundation
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Informatics Institute (IVI)
Abstract
In this paper, we focus on multi-task classification, where related classification tasks share the same label space and are learned simultaneously. In particular, we tackle a new setting, which is more realistic than currently addressed in the literature, where categories shift from training to test data. Hence, individual tasks do not contain complete training data for the categories in the test set. To generalize to such test data, it is crucial for individual tasks to leverage knowledge from related tasks. To this end, we propose learning an association graph to transfer knowledge among tasks for missing classes. We construct the association graph with nodes representing tasks, classes and instances, and encode the relationships among the nodes in the edges to guide their mutual knowledge transfer. By message passing on the association graph, our model enhances the categorical information of each instance, making it more discriminative. To avoid spurious correlations between task and class nodes in the graph, we introduce an assignment entropy maximization that encourages each class node to balance its edge weights. This enables all tasks to fully utilize the categorical information from related tasks. An extensive evaluation on three general benchmarks and a medical dataset for skin lesion classification reveals that our method consistently performs better than representative baselines.
Document type Conference contribution
Note With supplemental file
Language English
Published at https://papers.nips.cc/paper_files/paper/2022/hash/1cc70be9fb6a83bc46cf4ac21a91e0b0-Abstract-Conference.html
Other links https://github.com/autumn9999/MTC-with-Category-Shifts.git https://www.proceedings.com/68431.html
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