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Poster

Learning Bregman Divergences with Application to Robustness

Mohamed-Hicham LEGHETTAS · Markus PĆ¼schel

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Thu 12 Dec 4:30 p.m. PST — 7:30 p.m. PST

Abstract: We propose a novel and general method to learn Bregman divergences from raw high-dimensional data that measure similarity between images in pixel space. As a prototypical application, we learn divergences that consider real-world corruption of images (e.g., blur) as close to the original and noisy perturbations as far, even if in $L^p$-distance the opposite holds. We then define adversarial attacks by replacing the projected gradient descent (PGD) with the mirror descent associated with the learned Bregman divergence, and use them to improve the state-of-the-art in robustness through adversarial training for common image corruptions. In particular, for the contrast corruption that was found problematic in prior work we achieve an accuracy that exceeds the $L^p$- and the LPIPS-based adversarially trained neural networks by a margin of 27.16\% on the CIFAR-10-C corruption dataset.

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