User:J46hou
DROCC: Deep Robust One-Class Classification
Presented by
Jinjiang Lian, Yisheng Zhu, Jiawen Hou, Mingzhe Huang
Introduction
In this paper, the “one-class” classification, whose goal is to obtain accurate discriminators for a special class, has been studied. Popular uses of this technique include anomaly detection which is widely used in detecting outliers. Anomaly detection is a well-studied area of research, which aims to learn a model that accurately describes "normality". Its application ranges from fraud detection to medical diagnosis; however, the conventional approach of modeling with typical data using a simple function falls short when it comes to complex domains such as vision or speech. Another case where this would be useful is when recognizing “wake-word” while waking up AI systems such as Alexa.
Deep learning based on anomaly detection methods attempts to learn features automatically but has some limitations. One approach is based on extending the classical data modeling techniques over the learned representations, but in this case, all the points may be mapped to a single point which makes the layer look "perfect". The second approach is based on learning the salient geometric structure of data and training the discriminator to predict applied transformation. The result could be considered anomalous if the discriminator fails to predict the transformation accurately.
Thus, in this paper, a new approach called Deep Robust One-Class Classification (DROCC) was presented to solve the above concerns. DROCC is based on the assumption that the points from the class of interest lie on a well-sampled, locally linear low dimensional manifold. More specifically, we are presenting DROCC-LF which is an outlier-exposure style extension of DROCC. This extension combines the DROCC's anomaly detection loss with standard classification loss over the negative data and exploits the negative examples to learn a Mahalanobis distance.
Previous Work
Traditional approaches for one-class problems include one-class SVM (Scholkopf et al., 1999) and Isolation Forest (Liu et al., 2008)[9]. One drawback of these approaches is that they involve careful feature engineering when applied to structured domains like images. The current state of the art methodologies to tackle these kinds of problems are:
1. Approach based on prediction transformations (Golan & El-Yaniv, 2018; Hendrycks et al.,2019a) [1] This work is based on learning the salient geometric structure of typical data by applying specific transformations to the input data and training the discriminator to preduct applied transformation. This approach has some shortcomings in the sense that it depends heavily on an appropriate domain-specific set of transformations that are in general hard to obtain.
2. Approach of minimizing a classical one-class loss on the learned final layer representations such as DeepSVDD. (Ruff et al.,2018)[2] This such work has proposed some heuristics to mitigate issues like setting the bias to zero but it is often insufficient in practice. This method suffers from the fundamental drawback of representation collapse where the model is no longer being able to accurately recognize the feature representations.
3. Approach based on balancing unbalanced training data sets using methods such as SMOTE to synthetically create outlier data to train models on.
Motivation
Anomaly detection is a well-studied problem with a large body of research (Aggarwal, 2016; Chandola et al., 2009) [3]. The goal is to identify the outliers - the points not following a typical distribution.
Classical approaches for anomaly detection are based on modeling the typical data using simple functions over the low-dimensional subspace or a tree-structured partition of the input space to detect anomalies (Sch¨olkopf et al., 1999; Liu et al., 2008; Lakhina et al., 2004) [4], such as constructing a minimum-enclosing ball around the typical data points (Tax & Duin, 2004) [5]. They broadly fall into three categories: AD via generative modeling, Deep Once Class SVM, Transformations based methods, and Side-information based AD. While these techniques are well-suited when the input is featured appropriately, they struggle on complex domains like vision and speech, where hand-designing features are difficult.
AD via Generative Modeling: involves deep autoencoders and GAN based methods and have been deeply studied. But, this method solves a much harder problem than required and reconstructs the entire input during the decoding step
Deep One-Class SVM: Deep SVDD attempts to learn a neural network which maps data into a hypersphere. Mappings which fall within the hypersphere are considered "normal". It was the first method to introduce deep one-class classification for the purpose of anomaly detection, but is impeded by representation collapse.
Transformations based methods: Are more recent methods that are based on self-supervised training. The training process of these methods applies transformations to the regular points and training then trains the classifier to identify the transformations used. The model relies on the assumption that a point is normal iff the transformations applied to the point can be identified. Some proposed transformations are as simple as rotations and flips, or can be handcrafted and much more complicated. The various transformations that have been proposed are heavily domain dependent and are hard to design.
Side-information based AD: incorporate labelled anomalous data or out-of-distribution samples. DROCC makes no assumptions regarding access to side-information.
Another related problem is the one-class classification under limited negatives (OCLN). In this case, only a few negative samples are available. The goal is to find a classifier that would not misfire close negatives so that the false positive rate will be low.
DROCC is robust to representation collapse by involving a discriminative component that is general and empirically accurate on most standard domains like tabular, time-series and vision without requiring any additional side information. DROCC is motivated by the key observation that generally, the typical data lies on a low-dimensional manifold, which is well-sampled in the training data. This is believed to be true even in complex domains such as vision, speech, and natural language (Pless & Souvenir, 2009). [6]
Model Explanation
(a): A normal data manifold with red dots representing generated anomalous points in Ni(r).
(b): Decision boundary learned by DROCC when applied to the data from (a). Blue represents points classified as normal and red points are classified as abnormal. We observe from here that DROCC is able to capture the manifold accurately; whereas the classical methods OC-SVM and DeepSVDD perform poorly as they both try to learn a minimum enclosing ball for the whole set of positive data points.
(c), (d): First two dimensions of the decision boundary of DROCC and DROCC–LF, when applied to noisy data (Section 5.2). DROCC–LF is nearly optimal while DROCC’s decision boundary is inaccurate. Yellow color sine wave depicts the train data.
DROCC
The model is based on the assumption that the true data lies on a manifold. As manifolds resemble Euclidean space locally, our discriminative component is based on classifying a point as anomalous if it is outside the union of small L2 norm balls around the training typical points (See Figure 1a, 1b for an illustration). Importantly, the above definition allows us to synthetically generate anomalous points, and we adaptively generate the most effective anomalous points while training via a gradient ascent phase reminiscent of adversarial training. In other words, DROCC has a gradient ascent phase to adaptively add anomalous points to our training set and a gradient descent phase to minimize the classification loss by learning a representation and a classifier on top of the representations to separate typical points from the generated anomalous points. In this way, DROCC automatically learns an appropriate representation (like DeepSVDD) but is robust to a representation collapse as mapping all points to the same value would lead to poor discrimination between normal points and the generated anomalous points.
The algorithm that was used to train the model is laid out below in pseudocode.
For a DNN [math]\displaystyle{ f_\theta: \mathbb{R}^d \to \mathbb{R} }[/math] that is parameterized by a set of parameters [math]\displaystyle{ \theta }[/math], DROCC estimates [math]\displaystyle{ \theta^{dr} = \min_\theta\ell^{dr}(\theta) }[/math] where $$\ell^{dr}(\theta) = \lambda\|\theta\|^2 + \sum_{i=1}^n[\ell(f_\theta(x_i),1)+\mu\max_{\tilde{x}_i \in N_i(r)}\ell(f_\theta(\tilde{x}_i),-1)]$$ Here, [math]\displaystyle{ N_i(r) = \{\|\tilde{x}_i-x_i\|_2\leq\gamma\cdot r; r \leq \|\tilde{x}_i - x_j\|, \forall j=1,2,...n\} }[/math] contains all the points that are at least distance [math]\displaystyle{ r }[/math] from the training points. The [math]\displaystyle{ \gamma \geq 1 }[/math] is a regularization term, and [math]\displaystyle{ \ell:\mathbb{R} \times \mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R} }[/math] is a loss function. The [math]\displaystyle{ x_i }[/math] are normal points that should be classified as positive and the [math]\displaystyle{ \tilde{x}_i }[/math] are anomalous points that should be classified as negative. This formulation is a saddle point problem.
DROCC-LF
To especially tackle problems such as anomaly detection and outlier exposure (Hendrycks et al., 2019a) [7], DROCC–LF, an outlier-exposure style extension of DROCC was proposed. Intuitively, DROCC–LF combines DROCC’s anomaly detection loss (that is over only the positive data points) with standard classification loss over the negative data. In addition, DROCC–LF exploits the negative examples to learn a Mahalanobis distance to compare points over the manifold instead of using the standard Euclidean distance, which can be inaccurate for high-dimensional data with relatively fewer samples. (See Figure 1c, 1d for illustration)
Popular Dataset Benchmark Result
The CIFAR-10 dataset consists of 60000 32x32 color images in 10 classes, with 6000 images per class. There are 50000 training images and 10000 test images. The dataset is divided into five training batches and one test batch, each with 10000 images. The test batch contains exactly 1000 randomly selected images from each class. The training batches contain the remaining images in random order, but some training batches may contain more images from one class than another. Between them, the training batches contain exactly 5000 images from each class. The average AUC (with standard deviation) for one-vs-all anomaly detection on CIFAR-10 is shown in table 1. DROCC outperforms baselines on most classes, with gains as high as 20%, and notably, nearest neighbors (NN) beats all the baselines on 2 classes.
Figure 3 shows F1-Score (with standard deviation) for one-vs-all anomaly detection on Thyroid, Arrhythmia, and Abalone datasets from the UCI Machine Learning Repository. DROCC outperforms the baselines on all three datasets by a minimum of 0.07 which is about an 11.5% performance increase. Results on One-class Classification with Limited Negatives (OCLN):
MNIST 0 vs. 1 Classification: We consider an experimental setup on the MNIST dataset, where the training data consists of Digit 0, the normal class, and Digit 1 as the anomaly. During the evaluation, in addition to samples from training distribution, we also have half zeros, which act as challenging OOD points (close negatives). These half zeros are generated by randomly masking 50% of the pixels (Figure 2). BCE performs poorly, with a recall of 54% only at a fixed FPR of 3%. DROCC–OE gives a recall value of 98:16% outperforming DeepSAD by a margin of 7%, which gives a recall value of 90:91%. DROCC–LF provides further improvement with a recall of 99:4% at 3% FPR.
Wake word Detection: Finally, we evaluate DROCC–LF on the practical problem of wake word detection with low FPR against arbitrary OOD negatives. To this end, we identify a keyword, say “Marvin” from the audio commands dataset (Warden, 2018) [8] as the positive class, and the remaining 34 keywords are labeled as the negative class. For training, we sample points uniformly at random from the above-mentioned dataset. However, for evaluation, we sample positives from the train distribution, but negatives contain a few challenging OOD points as well. Sampling challenging negatives itself is a hard task and is the key motivating reason for studying the problem. So, we manually list close-by keywords to Marvin such as Mar, Vin, Marvelous, etc. We then generate audio snippets for these keywords via a speech synthesis tool 2 with a variety of accents. Figure 5 shows that for 3% and 5% FPR settings, DROCC–LF is significantly more accurate than the baselines. For example, with FPR=3%, DROCC–LF is 10% more accurate than the baselines. We repeated the same experiment with the keyword: Seven, and observed a similar trend. In summary, DROCC–LF is able to generalize well against negatives that are “close” to the true positives even when such negatives were not supplied with the training data.
Conclusion and Future Work
We introduced DROCC method for deep anomaly detection. It models normal data points using a low-dimensional manifold, so these close points can be compared via Euclidean distance. Based on this intuition, DROCC’s optimization is formulated as a saddle point problem which is solved via a standard gradient descent-ascent algorithm. We then extended DROCC to OCLN problem where the goal is to generalize well against arbitrary negatives, assuming the positive class is well sampled and a small number of negative points are also available. Both the methods perform significantly better than strong baselines, in their respective problem settings.
For computational efficiency, we simplified the projection set of both methods which can perhaps slow down the convergence of the two methods. Designing optimization algorithms that can work with the stricter set is an exciting research direction. Further, we would also like to rigorously analyze DROCC, assuming enough samples from a low-curvature manifold. Finally, as OCLN is an exciting problem that routinely comes up in a variety of real-world applications, we would like to apply DROCC–LF to a few high impact scenarios.
The results of this study showed that DROCC is comparatively better for anomaly detection across many different areas, such as tabular data, images, audio, and time series, when compared to existing state-of-the-art techniques.
It would be interesting to see how the DROCC method performs in situations where the anomaly is very rare, say detecting signals of volcanic explosion from seismic activity data. Such challenging anomalous situations will be a test of endurance for this method and can even help advance work in this area.
References
[1]: Golan, I. and El-Yaniv, R. Deep anomaly detection using geometric transformations. In Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS), 2018.
[2]: Ruff, L., Vandermeulen, R., Goernitz, N., Deecke, L., Siddiqui, S. A., Binder, A., M¨uller, E., and Kloft, M. Deep one-class classification. In International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML), 2018.
[3]: Aggarwal, C. C. Outlier Analysis. Springer Publishing Company, Incorporated, 2nd edition, 2016. ISBN 3319475770.
[4]: Sch¨olkopf, B., Williamson, R., Smola, A., Shawe-Taylor, J., and Platt, J. Support vector method for novelty detection. In Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems, 1999.
[5]: Tax, D. M. and Duin, R. P. Support vector data description. Machine Learning, 54(1), 2004.
[6]: Pless, R. and Souvenir, R. A survey of manifold learning for images. IPSJ Transactions on Computer Vision and Applications, 1, 2009.
[7]: Hendrycks, D., Mazeika, M., and Dietterich, T. Deep anomaly detection with outlier exposure. In International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR), 2019a.
[8]: Warden, P. Speech commands: A dataset for limited vocabulary speech recognition, 2018. URL https: //arxiv.org/abs/1804.03209.
[9]: Liu, F. T., Ting, K. M., and Zhou, Z.-H. Isolation forest. In Proceedings of the 2008 Eighth IEEE International Conference on Data Mining, 2008.
Critiques/Insights
1. It would be interesting to see this implemented in self-driving cars, for instance, to detect unusual road conditions.
2. Figure 1 shows a good representation on how this model works. However, how can we know that this model is not prone to overfitting? There are many situations where there are valid points that lie outside of the line, especially new data that the model has never see before. An explanation on how this is avoided would be good.
3.In the introduction part, it should first explain what is "one class", and then make a detailed application. Moreover, special definition words are used in many places in the text. No detailed explanation was given. In the end, the future application fields of DROCC and the research direction of the group can be explained.
4. The geometry of this technique (classification based on incidence outside of a ball centred at a known point [math]\displaystyle{ x }[/math]) sounds quite similar to K-nearest neighbors. While the authors compared DROCC to single-nearest neighbor classification, choosing a higher K would result in a stronger, more regularized model. It would be interesting to see how DROCC compares to the general KNN classifier
5. This is a nice summary and the authors introduce clearly on the performance of DROCC. It is nice to use Alexa as an example to catch readers' attention. I think it will be nice to include the algorithm of the DROCC or the architecture of DROCC in this summary to help us know the whole view of this method. Maybe it will be interesting to apply DROCC in biomedical studies? since one-class classification is often used in biomedical studies.
6. The training method resembles adversarial learning with gradient ascent, however, there is no evaluation of this method on adversarial examples. This is quite unusual considering the paper proposed a method for robust one-class classification, and can be a security threat in real life in critical applications.
7. The underlying idea behind OCLN is very similar to how neural networks are implemented in recommender systems and trained over positive/negative triplet models. In that case as well, due to the nature of implicit and explicit feedback, positive data tends to dominate the system. It would be interesting to see if insights from that area could be used to further boost the model presented in this paper.
8. The paper shows the performance of DROCC being evaluated for time series data. It is interesting to see high AUC scores for DROCC against baselines like nearest neighbours and REBMs.Because detecting abnormal data in time series datasets is not common to practise.