Domain Separation Networks

A domain adaptation model with shared and private encoders and a shared decoder

Released in: Domain Separation Networks

Contributor:

Summary

The cost of large scale data collection and annotation often makes the application of machine learning algorithms to new tasks or datasets prohibitively expensive. One approach circumventing this cost is training models on synthetic data where annotations are provided automatically. Despite their appeal, such models often fail to generalize from synthetic to real images, necessitating domain adaptation algorithms to manipulate these models before they can be successfully applied. Existing approaches focus either on mapping representations from one domain to the other, or on learning to extract features that are invariant to the domain from which they were extracted. However, by focusing only on creating a mapping or shared representation between the two domains, they ignore the individual characteristics of each domain. The authors hypothesize that explicitly modeling what is unique to each domain can improve a model’s ability to extract domain-invariant features. Inspired by work on private-shared component analysis, we explicitly learn to extract image representations that are partitioned into two subspaces: one component which is private to each domain and one which is shared across domains. Our model is trained to not only perform the task we care about in the source domain, but also to use the partitioned representation to reconstruct the images from both domains. Our novel architecture results in a model that outperforms the state-of-the-art on a range of unsupervised domain adaptation scenarios and additionally produces visualizations of the private and shared representations enabling interpretation of the domain adaptation process.

2016

Year Released

Key Links & Stats

DSN

Domain Separation Networks

Domain Separation Networks

ML Tasks

  1. Domain Adaptation

ML Platform

  1. Pytorch

Modalities

  1. General

Verticals

  1. General

CG Platform

  1. Not Applicable

Related organizations

Google Brain

Google Research

Imperial College London