JOURNAL ARTICLE

Prototypical Cross-domain Self-supervised Learning for Few-shot Unsupervised Domain Adaptation

Abstract

Unsupervised Domain Adaptation (UDA) transfers predictive models from a fully-labeled source domain to an unlabeled target domain. In some applications, however, it is expensive even to collect labels in the source domain, making most previous works impractical. To cope with this problem, recent work performed instance-wise cross-domain self-supervised learning, followed by an additional fine-tuning stage. However, the instance-wise self-supervised learning only learns and aligns low-level discriminative features. In this paper, we propose an end-to-end Prototypical Cross-domain Self-Supervised Learning (PCS) framework for Few-shot Unsupervised Domain Adaptation (FUDA) 1 . PCS not only performs cross-domain low-level feature alignment, but it also encodes and aligns semantic structures in the shared embedding space across domains. Our framework captures category-wise semantic structures of the data by in-domain prototypical contrastive learning; and performs feature alignment through cross-domain prototypical self-supervision. Compared with state-of-the-art methods, PCS improves the mean classification accuracy over different domain pairs on FUDA by 10.5%, 3.5%, 9.0%, and 13.2% on Office, Office-Home, VisDA-2017, and DomainNet, respectively.

Keywords:
Computer science Discriminative model Artificial intelligence Domain (mathematical analysis) Domain adaptation Feature (linguistics) Machine learning Embedding Feature learning Supervised learning Unsupervised learning Pattern recognition (psychology) Artificial neural network Mathematics Classifier (UML)

Metrics

141
Cited By
16.23
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
133
Refs
0.99
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Citation History

Topics

Domain Adaptation and Few-Shot Learning
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Artificial Intelligence
Multimodal Machine Learning Applications
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Cancer-related molecular mechanisms research
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Cancer Research
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