Computer Science > Machine Learning
[Submitted on 3 Jun 2019 (v1), last revised 26 Sep 2019 (this version, v2)]
Title:Adversarially Robust Generalization Just Requires More Unlabeled Data
View PDFAbstract:Neural network robustness has recently been highlighted by the existence of adversarial examples. Many previous works show that the learned networks do not perform well on perturbed test data, and significantly more labeled data is required to achieve adversarially robust generalization. In this paper, we theoretically and empirically show that with just more unlabeled data, we can learn a model with better adversarially robust generalization. The key insight of our results is based on a risk decomposition theorem, in which the expected robust risk is separated into two parts: the stability part which measures the prediction stability in the presence of perturbations, and the accuracy part which evaluates the standard classification accuracy. As the stability part does not depend on any label information, we can optimize this part using unlabeled data. We further prove that for a specific Gaussian mixture problem, adversarially robust generalization can be almost as easy as the standard generalization in supervised learning if a sufficiently large amount of unlabeled data is provided. Inspired by the theoretical findings, we further show that a practical adversarial training algorithm that leverages unlabeled data can improve adversarial robust generalization on MNIST and Cifar-10.
Submission history
From: Runtian Zhai [view email][v1] Mon, 3 Jun 2019 03:56:41 UTC (26 KB)
[v2] Thu, 26 Sep 2019 01:44:46 UTC (40 KB)
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