2021 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing

6-11 June 2021 • Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Extracting Knowledge from Information

2021 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing

6-11 June 2021 • Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Extracting Knowledge from Information

Technical Program

Paper Detail

Paper IDMLSP-25.5
Paper Title ON THE MARGINAL BENEFIT OF ACTIVE LEARNING: DOES SELF-SUPERVISION EAT ITS CAKE?
Authors Yao-Chun Chan, Mingchen Li, Samet Oymak, University of California, Riverside, United States
SessionMLSP-25: Reinforcement Learning 1
LocationGather.Town
Session Time:Thursday, 10 June, 13:00 - 13:45
Presentation Time:Thursday, 10 June, 13:00 - 13:45
Presentation Poster
Topic Machine Learning for Signal Processing: [MLR-SSUP] Self-supervised and semi-supervised learning
IEEE Xplore Open Preview  Click here to view in IEEE Xplore
Virtual Presentation  Click here to watch in the Virtual Conference
Abstract Active learning is the set of techniques for intelligently labeling large unlabeled datasets to reduce the labeling effort. In parallel, recent developments in self-supervised and semi-supervised learning (S4L) provide powerful techniques, based on data-augmentation, contrastive learning, and self-training, that enable superior utilization of unlabeled data which led to a significant reduction in required labeling in the standard machine learning benchmarks. A natural question is whether these paradigms can be unified to obtain superior results. To this aim, this paper provides a novel algorithmic framework integrating self-supervised pretraining, active learning, and consistency-regularized self-training. We conduct extensive experiments with our framework on CIFAR10 and CIFAR100 datasets. These experiments enable us to isolate and assess the benefits of individual components which are evaluated using state-of-the-art methods (e.g.~Core-Set, VAAL, simCLR, FixMatch). Our experiments reveal two key insights: (i) Self-supervised pre-training significantly improves semi-supervised learning, especially in the few-label regime, (ii) The benefit of active learning is undermined and subsumed by S4L techniques. Specifically, we fail to observe any additional benefit of state-of-the-art active learning algorithms when combined with state-of-the-art S4L techniques.