Novelty Detection via Contrastive Learning with Negative Data Augmentation

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Abstract

Novelty detection is the process of determining whether a query example differs from the learned training distribution. Previous generative adversarial networks based methods and self-supervised approaches suffer from instability training, mode dropping, and low discriminative ability. We overcome such problems by introducing a novel decoder-encoder framework. Firstly, a generative network (a.k.a. decoder) learns the representation by mapping the initialized latent vector to an image. In particular, this vector is initialized by considering the entire distribution of training data to avoid the problem of mode-dropping. Secondly, a contrastive network (a.k.a. encoder) aims to “learn to compare” through mutual information estimation, which directly helps the generative network to obtain a more discriminative representation by using a negative data augmentation strategy. Extensive experiments show that our model has significant superiority over cutting-edge novelty detectors and achieves new state-of-the-art results on various novelty detection benchmarks, e.g. CIFAR10 and DCASE. Moreover, our model is more stable for training in a non-adversarial manner, compared to other adversarial based novelty detection methods.

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APA

Chen, C., Xie, Y., Lin, S., Qiao, R., Zhou, J., Tan, X., … Ma, L. (2021). Novelty Detection via Contrastive Learning with Negative Data Augmentation. In IJCAI International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (pp. 606–614). International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence. https://doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2021/84

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