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Description
This thesis encompasses a comprehensive research effort dedicated to overcoming the critical bottlenecks that hinder the current generation of neural networks, thereby significantly advancing their reliability and performance. Deep neural networks, with their millions of parameters, suffer from over-parameterization and lack of constraints, leading to limited generalization capabilities. In other

This thesis encompasses a comprehensive research effort dedicated to overcoming the critical bottlenecks that hinder the current generation of neural networks, thereby significantly advancing their reliability and performance. Deep neural networks, with their millions of parameters, suffer from over-parameterization and lack of constraints, leading to limited generalization capabilities. In other words, the complex architecture and millions of parameters present challenges in finding the right balance between capturing useful patterns and avoiding noise in the data. To address these issues, this thesis explores novel solutions based on knowledge distillation, enabling the learning of robust representations. Leveraging the capabilities of large-scale networks, effective learning strategies are developed. Moreover, the limitations of dependency on external networks in the distillation process, which often require large-scale models, are effectively overcome by proposing a self-distillation strategy. The proposed approach empowers the model to generate high-level knowledge within a single network, pushing the boundaries of knowledge distillation. The effectiveness of the proposed method is not only demonstrated across diverse applications, including image classification, object detection, and semantic segmentation but also explored in practical considerations such as handling data scarcity and assessing the transferability of the model to other learning tasks. Another major obstacle hindering the development of reliable and robust models lies in their black-box nature, impeding clear insights into the contributions toward the final predictions and yielding uninterpretable feature representations. To address this challenge, this thesis introduces techniques that incorporate simple yet powerful deep constraints rooted in Riemannian geometry. These constraints confer geometric qualities upon the latent representation, thereby fostering a more interpretable and insightful representation. In addition to its primary focus on general tasks like image classification and activity recognition, this strategy offers significant benefits in real-world applications where data scarcity is prevalent. Moreover, its robustness in feature removal showcases its potential for edge applications. By successfully tackling these challenges, this research contributes to advancing the field of machine learning and provides a foundation for building more reliable and robust systems across various application domains.
ContributorsChoi, Hongjun (Author) / Turaga, Pavan (Thesis advisor) / Jayasuriya, Suren (Committee member) / Li, Wenwen (Committee member) / Fazli, Pooyan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Millimeter-wave (mmWave) and sub-terahertz (sub-THz) systems aim to utilize the large bandwidth available at these frequencies. This has the potential to enable several future applications that require high data rates, such as autonomous vehicles and digital twins. These systems, however, have several challenges that need to be addressed to realize

Millimeter-wave (mmWave) and sub-terahertz (sub-THz) systems aim to utilize the large bandwidth available at these frequencies. This has the potential to enable several future applications that require high data rates, such as autonomous vehicles and digital twins. These systems, however, have several challenges that need to be addressed to realize their gains in practice. First, they need to deploy large antenna arrays and use narrow beams to guarantee sufficient receive power. Adjusting the narrow beams of the large antenna arrays incurs massive beam training overhead. Second, the sensitivity to blockages is a key challenge for mmWave and THz networks. Since these networks mainly rely on line-of-sight (LOS) links, sudden link blockages highly threaten the reliability of the networks. Further, when the LOS link is blocked, the network typically needs to hand off the user to another LOS basestation, which may incur critical time latency, especially if a search over a large codebook of narrow beams is needed. A promising way to tackle both these challenges lies in leveraging additional side information such as visual, LiDAR, radar, and position data. These sensors provide rich information about the wireless environment, which can be utilized for fast beam and blockage prediction. This dissertation presents a machine-learning framework for sensing-aided beam and blockage prediction. In particular, for beam prediction, this work proposes to utilize visual and positional data to predict the optimal beam indices. For the first time, this work investigates the sensing-aided beam prediction task in a real-world vehicle-to-infrastructure and drone communication scenario. Similarly, for blockage prediction, this dissertation proposes a multi-modal wireless communication solution that utilizes bimodal machine learning to perform proactive blockage prediction and user hand-off. Evaluations on both real-world and synthetic datasets illustrate the promising performance of the proposed solutions and highlight their potential for next-generation communication and sensing systems.
ContributorsCharan, Gouranga (Author) / Alkhateeb, Ahmed (Thesis advisor) / Chakrabarti, Chaitali (Committee member) / Turaga, Pavan (Committee member) / Michelusi, Nicolò (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
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Description
Mixture of experts is a machine learning ensemble approach that consists of individual models that are trained to be ``experts'' on subsets of the data, and a gating network that provides weights to output a combination of the expert predictions. Mixture of experts models do not currently see wide use

Mixture of experts is a machine learning ensemble approach that consists of individual models that are trained to be ``experts'' on subsets of the data, and a gating network that provides weights to output a combination of the expert predictions. Mixture of experts models do not currently see wide use due to difficulty in training diverse experts and high computational requirements. This work presents modifications of the mixture of experts formulation that use domain knowledge to improve training, and incorporate parameter sharing among experts to reduce computational requirements.

First, this work presents an application of mixture of experts models for quality robust visual recognition. First it is shown that human subjects outperform deep neural networks on classification of distorted images, and then propose a model, MixQualNet, that is more robust to distortions. The proposed model consists of ``experts'' that are trained on a particular type of image distortion. The final output of the model is a weighted sum of the expert models, where the weights are determined by a separate gating network. The proposed model also incorporates weight sharing to reduce the number of parameters, as well as increase performance.



Second, an application of mixture of experts to predict visual saliency is presented. A computational saliency model attempts to predict where humans will look in an image. In the proposed model, each expert network is trained to predict saliency for a set of closely related images. The final saliency map is computed as a weighted mixture of the expert networks' outputs, with weights determined by a separate gating network. The proposed model achieves better performance than several other visual saliency models and a baseline non-mixture model.

Finally, this work introduces a saliency model that is a weighted mixture of models trained for different levels of saliency. Levels of saliency include high saliency, which corresponds to regions where almost all subjects look, and low saliency, which corresponds to regions where some, but not all subjects look. The weighted mixture shows improved performance compared with baseline models because of the diversity of the individual model predictions.
ContributorsDodge, Samuel Fuller (Author) / Karam, Lina (Thesis advisor) / Jayasuriya, Suren (Committee member) / Li, Baoxin (Committee member) / Turaga, Pavan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Non-line-of-sight (NLOS) imaging of objects not visible to either the camera or illumina-

tion source is a challenging task with vital applications including surveillance and robotics.

Recent NLOS reconstruction advances have been achieved using time-resolved measure-

ments. Acquiring these time-resolved measurements requires expensive and specialized

detectors and laser sources. In work proposes a data-driven

Non-line-of-sight (NLOS) imaging of objects not visible to either the camera or illumina-

tion source is a challenging task with vital applications including surveillance and robotics.

Recent NLOS reconstruction advances have been achieved using time-resolved measure-

ments. Acquiring these time-resolved measurements requires expensive and specialized

detectors and laser sources. In work proposes a data-driven approach for NLOS 3D local-

ization requiring only a conventional camera and projector. The localisation is performed

using a voxelisation and a regression problem. Accuracy of greater than 90% is achieved

in localizing a NLOS object to a 5cm × 5cm × 5cm volume in real data. By adopting

the regression approach an object of width 10cm to localised to approximately 1.5cm. To

generalize to line-of-sight (LOS) scenes with non-planar surfaces, an adaptive lighting al-

gorithm is adopted. This algorithm, based on radiosity, identifies and illuminates scene

patches in the LOS which most contribute to the NLOS light paths, and can factor in sys-

tem power constraints. Improvements ranging from 6%-15% in accuracy with a non-planar

LOS wall using adaptive lighting is reported, demonstrating the advantage of combining

the physics of light transport with active illumination for data-driven NLOS imaging.
ContributorsChandran, Sreenithy (Author) / Jayasuriya, Suren (Thesis advisor) / Turaga, Pavan (Committee member) / Dasarathy, Gautam (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
Discriminative learning when training and test data belong to different distributions is a challenging and complex task. Often times we have very few or no labeled data from the test or target distribution, but we may have plenty of labeled data from one or multiple related sources with different distributions.

Discriminative learning when training and test data belong to different distributions is a challenging and complex task. Often times we have very few or no labeled data from the test or target distribution, but we may have plenty of labeled data from one or multiple related sources with different distributions. Due to its capability of migrating knowledge from related domains, transfer learning has shown to be effective for cross-domain learning problems. In this dissertation, I carry out research along this direction with a particular focus on designing efficient and effective algorithms for BioImaging and Bilingual applications. Specifically, I propose deep transfer learning algorithms which combine transfer learning and deep learning to improve image annotation performance. Firstly, I propose to generate the deep features for the Drosophila embryo images via pretrained deep models and build linear classifiers on top of the deep features. Secondly, I propose to fine-tune the pretrained model with a small amount of labeled images. The time complexity and performance of deep transfer learning methodologies are investigated. Promising results have demonstrated the knowledge transfer ability of proposed deep transfer algorithms. Moreover, I propose a novel Robust Principal Component Analysis (RPCA) approach to process the noisy images in advance. In addition, I also present a two-stage re-weighting framework for general domain adaptation problems. The distribution of source domain is mapped towards the target domain in the first stage, and an adaptive learning model is proposed in the second stage to incorporate label information from the target domain if it is available. Then the proposed model is applied to tackle cross lingual spam detection problem at LinkedIn’s website. Our experimental results on real data demonstrate the efficiency and effectiveness of the proposed algorithms.
ContributorsSun, Qian (Author) / Ye, Jieping (Committee member) / Xue, Guoliang (Committee member) / Liu, Huan (Committee member) / Li, Jing (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
High-level inference tasks in video applications such as recognition, video retrieval, and zero-shot classification have become an active research area in recent years. One fundamental requirement for such applications is to extract high-quality features that maintain high-level information in the videos.

Many video feature extraction algorithms have been purposed, such

High-level inference tasks in video applications such as recognition, video retrieval, and zero-shot classification have become an active research area in recent years. One fundamental requirement for such applications is to extract high-quality features that maintain high-level information in the videos.

Many video feature extraction algorithms have been purposed, such as STIP, HOG3D, and Dense Trajectories. These algorithms are often referred to as “handcrafted” features as they were deliberately designed based on some reasonable considerations. However, these algorithms may fail when dealing with high-level tasks or complex scene videos. Due to the success of using deep convolution neural networks (CNNs) to extract global representations for static images, researchers have been using similar techniques to tackle video contents. Typical techniques first extract spatial features by processing raw images using deep convolution architectures designed for static image classifications. Then simple average, concatenation or classifier-based fusion/pooling methods are applied to the extracted features. I argue that features extracted in such ways do not acquire enough representative information since videos, unlike images, should be characterized as a temporal sequence of semantically coherent visual contents and thus need to be represented in a manner considering both semantic and spatio-temporal information.

In this thesis, I propose a novel architecture to learn semantic spatio-temporal embedding for videos to support high-level video analysis. The proposed method encodes video spatial and temporal information separately by employing a deep architecture consisting of two channels of convolutional neural networks (capturing appearance and local motion) followed by their corresponding Fully Connected Gated Recurrent Unit (FC-GRU) encoders for capturing longer-term temporal structure of the CNN features. The resultant spatio-temporal representation (a vector) is used to learn a mapping via a Fully Connected Multilayer Perceptron (FC-MLP) to the word2vec semantic embedding space, leading to a semantic interpretation of the video vector that supports high-level analysis. I evaluate the usefulness and effectiveness of this new video representation by conducting experiments on action recognition, zero-shot video classification, and semantic video retrieval (word-to-video) retrieval, using the UCF101 action recognition dataset.
ContributorsHu, Sheng-Hung (Author) / Li, Baoxin (Thesis advisor) / Turaga, Pavan (Committee member) / Liang, Jianming (Committee member) / Tong, Hanghang (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
The widespread adoption of computer vision models is often constrained by the issue of domain mismatch. Models that are trained with data belonging to one distribution, perform poorly when tested with data from a different distribution. Variations in vision based data can be attributed to the following reasons, viz., differences

The widespread adoption of computer vision models is often constrained by the issue of domain mismatch. Models that are trained with data belonging to one distribution, perform poorly when tested with data from a different distribution. Variations in vision based data can be attributed to the following reasons, viz., differences in image quality (resolution, brightness, occlusion and color), changes in camera perspective, dissimilar backgrounds and an inherent diversity of the samples themselves. Machine learning techniques like transfer learning are employed to adapt computational models across distributions. Domain adaptation is a special case of transfer learning, where knowledge from a source domain is transferred to a target domain in the form of learned models and efficient feature representations.

The dissertation outlines novel domain adaptation approaches across different feature spaces; (i) a linear Support Vector Machine model for domain alignment; (ii) a nonlinear kernel based approach that embeds domain-aligned data for enhanced classification; (iii) a hierarchical model implemented using deep learning, that estimates domain-aligned hash values for the source and target data, and (iv) a proposal for a feature selection technique to reduce cross-domain disparity. These adaptation procedures are tested and validated across a range of computer vision applications like object classification, facial expression recognition, digit recognition, and activity recognition. The dissertation also provides a unique perspective of domain adaptation literature from the point-of-view of linear, nonlinear and hierarchical feature spaces. The dissertation concludes with a discussion on the future directions for research that highlight the role of domain adaptation in an era of rapid advancements in artificial intelligence.
ContributorsDemakethepalli Venkateswara, Hemanth (Author) / Panchanathan, Sethuraman (Thesis advisor) / Li, Baoxin (Committee member) / Davulcu, Hasan (Committee member) / Ye, Jieping (Committee member) / Chakraborty, Shayok (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
Compressive sensing theory allows to sense and reconstruct signals/images with lower sampling rate than Nyquist rate. Applications in resource constrained environment stand to benefit from this theory, opening up many possibilities for new applications at the same time. The traditional inference pipeline for computer vision sequence reconstructing the image from

Compressive sensing theory allows to sense and reconstruct signals/images with lower sampling rate than Nyquist rate. Applications in resource constrained environment stand to benefit from this theory, opening up many possibilities for new applications at the same time. The traditional inference pipeline for computer vision sequence reconstructing the image from compressive measurements. However,the reconstruction process is a computationally expensive step that also provides poor results at high compression rate. There have been several successful attempts to perform inference tasks directly on compressive measurements such as activity recognition. In this thesis, I am interested to tackle a more challenging vision problem - Visual question answering (VQA) without reconstructing the compressive images. I investigate the feasibility of this problem with a series of experiments, and I evaluate proposed methods on a VQA dataset and discuss promising results and direction for future work.
ContributorsHuang, Li-Chin (Author) / Turaga, Pavan (Thesis advisor) / Yang, Yezhou (Committee member) / Li, Baoxin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
Deep learning architectures have been widely explored in computer vision and have

depicted commendable performance in a variety of applications. A fundamental challenge

in training deep networks is the requirement of large amounts of labeled training

data. While gathering large quantities of unlabeled data is cheap and easy, annotating

the data is an expensive

Deep learning architectures have been widely explored in computer vision and have

depicted commendable performance in a variety of applications. A fundamental challenge

in training deep networks is the requirement of large amounts of labeled training

data. While gathering large quantities of unlabeled data is cheap and easy, annotating

the data is an expensive process in terms of time, labor and human expertise.

Thus, developing algorithms that minimize the human effort in training deep models

is of immense practical importance. Active learning algorithms automatically identify

salient and exemplar samples from large amounts of unlabeled data and can augment

maximal information to supervised learning models, thereby reducing the human annotation

effort in training machine learning models. The goal of this dissertation is to

fuse ideas from deep learning and active learning and design novel deep active learning

algorithms. The proposed learning methodologies explore diverse label spaces to

solve different computer vision applications. Three major contributions have emerged

from this work; (i) a deep active framework for multi-class image classication, (ii)

a deep active model with and without label correlation for multi-label image classi-

cation and (iii) a deep active paradigm for regression. Extensive empirical studies

on a variety of multi-class, multi-label and regression vision datasets corroborate the

potential of the proposed methods for real-world applications. Additional contributions

include: (i) a multimodal emotion database consisting of recordings of facial

expressions, body gestures, vocal expressions and physiological signals of actors enacting

various emotions, (ii) four multimodal deep belief network models and (iii)

an in-depth analysis of the effect of transfer of multimodal emotion features between

source and target networks on classification accuracy and training time. These related

contributions help comprehend the challenges involved in training deep learning

models and motivate the main goal of this dissertation.
ContributorsRanganathan, Hiranmayi (Author) / Sethuraman, Panchanathan (Thesis advisor) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Li, Baoxin (Committee member) / Chakraborty, Shayok (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
The performance of most of the visual computing tasks depends on the quality of the features extracted from the raw data. Insightful feature representation increases the performance of many learning algorithms by exposing the underlying explanatory factors of the output for the unobserved input. A good representation should also handle

The performance of most of the visual computing tasks depends on the quality of the features extracted from the raw data. Insightful feature representation increases the performance of many learning algorithms by exposing the underlying explanatory factors of the output for the unobserved input. A good representation should also handle anomalies in the data such as missing samples and noisy input caused by the undesired, external factors of variation. It should also reduce the data redundancy. Over the years, many feature extraction processes have been invented to produce good representations of raw images and videos.

The feature extraction processes can be categorized into three groups. The first group contains processes that are hand-crafted for a specific task. Hand-engineering features requires the knowledge of domain experts and manual labor. However, the feature extraction process is interpretable and explainable. Next group contains the latent-feature extraction processes. While the original feature lies in a high-dimensional space, the relevant factors for a task often lie on a lower dimensional manifold. The latent-feature extraction employs hidden variables to expose the underlying data properties that cannot be directly measured from the input. Latent features seek a specific structure such as sparsity or low-rank into the derived representation through sophisticated optimization techniques. The last category is that of deep features. These are obtained by passing raw input data with minimal pre-processing through a deep network. Its parameters are computed by iteratively minimizing a task-based loss.

In this dissertation, I present four pieces of work where I create and learn suitable data representations. The first task employs hand-crafted features to perform clinically-relevant retrieval of diabetic retinopathy images. The second task uses latent features to perform content-adaptive image enhancement. The third task ranks a pair of images based on their aestheticism. The goal of the last task is to capture localized image artifacts in small datasets with patch-level labels. For both these tasks, I propose novel deep architectures and show significant improvement over the previous state-of-art approaches. A suitable combination of feature representations augmented with an appropriate learning approach can increase performance for most visual computing tasks.
ContributorsChandakkar, Parag Shridhar (Author) / Li, Baoxin (Thesis advisor) / Yang, Yezhou (Committee member) / Turaga, Pavan (Committee member) / Davulcu, Hasan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017