Lecture Notes in Deep Learning: Visualization & Attention – Part 3

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Direct Visualization Methods

These are the lecture notes for FAU’s YouTube Lecture “Deep Learning“. This is a full transcript of the lecture video & matching slides. We hope, you enjoy this as much as the videos. Of course, this transcript was created with deep learning techniques largely automatically and only minor manual modifications were performed. Try it yourself! If you spot mistakes, please let us know!

Welcome back to deep learning! So, today I want to talk a bit about the actual visualization techniques that allow you to understand what’s happening inside a deep neural network.

Let’s figure out what happens inside deep networks! Image created using gifify. Source: YouTube.

Okay. So, let’s try to figure out what’s happening inside the networks. We’ll start with the simple parameter visualization. This is essentially the easiest technique. We’ve already worked with this in previous videos.

A simple technique to visualise learned parameters is to look at the trained kernels. Image under CC BY 4.0 from the Deep Learning Lecture.

So, the idea is that you can plot the learned filter weights directly. It’s easy to implement. It’s also easy to interpret for the first layer. Here, you see some examples of the first layer filters in AlexNet. If you see very noisy first layers, then you can probably already guess that there’s something wrong. So, for example, you’re picking up the noise characteristic of a specific sensor. Apart from that, it’s mostly uninteresting because you can see that they take the shape of edge and Gabor filters, but it doesn’t tell you really what’s happening in later parts of the network. If you have small kernels, then you can probably still interpret them. But if you go deeper you would have to understand what’s already happened in the first layers. So, they somehow stack and you can’t understand what’s really happening inside the deeper layers.

“You have many questions and though the process has altered your consciousness, you remain irrevocably human. Therefore, some of my answers you will understand and some of them you will not.” Image created using gifify. Source: YouTube.

So, we need some different ideas. One idea is that we visualize the activations. The kernels are difficult to interpret. So, we look at the activations that are generated by the Kernels because they tell us what the network is computing from a specific input. If you have a strong response, it probably means that the feature is present. If you have a weaker response, the feature is probably absent.

High activations indicate a strong agreement between the neuron and the input. Image under CC BY 4.0 from the Deep Learning Lecture.

So, how does this look like? For the first, layer you can see that the activations then look like normal filter responses. So, you see here the input and then filter zero and for the one, you can see that they somehow filter the input. Of course, you can then proceed and look at the activations of deeper layers. Then, you already realized that looking at the activations maybe somehow interesting, but the activation maps typically lose resolution very quickly due to the downsampling. So, this means that you then result in very coarse activation maps.

Deeper activation maps typically only have limited resolution. Image under CC BY 4.0 from the Deep Learning Lecture.

So here, you see a visualization that may correspond to face detection or face-like features. Then, we can start speculating what this kind of feature is actually representing inside the deep network. There’s the deep visualization toolbox that I have in [25] and it’s online available. It allows you to compute things like that. Well, the drawback is, of course, that we don’t get precise information, why that specific neuron was activated or why this feature map takes this shape.

“Concordantly while your first question may be the most pertinent you may or may not realize it is also the most irrelevant.” Image created using gifify. Source: YouTube.

Well, what else can we do? We can investigate features via occlusion. The idea here is that you move a masking patch around the input image. With this patch then you kind of remove information from the image. Then, you try to visualize the confidence for a specific decision with respect to the different positions of this occluding patch.

Patch occlusion is inspired by lesion studies in biological neural networks. Image under CC BY 4.0 from the Deep Learning Lecture.

Then, of course, an area where the patch caused a large drop in confidence is probably an area that is related to the specific classification. So, we have some examples here. We have this patch to mask the original input on the left. The two different versions of masking are in the center and on the right. Then, you can see that the reduction in confidence for the number three is much larger in the center image than on the right-hand side image. So, we can try to identify confounds or wrong focus using this kind of technique.

Occlusion reveals which parts of the image are relevant for the classification. Image under CC BY 4.0 from the Deep Learning Lecture.

Let’s look at some more examples. Here, you see the pomeranian image on the top left. The important part of the image is really located in the center. If you start occluding the center, also the confidence for the class pomeranian will go down. In the middle column, you see the true label car wheel and the recorded image. On the bottom, you can see that if you hide the car wheel then, of course, the confidence drops. But if you start hiding parts of the advertisements on the car, also the confidence drops. So, this is a kind of confounder that was probably learned. A car wheel may be in close collocation to such other parts of the image even including advertisements. Here on the right, you see the true label Afghan hound. If you start occluding the dog, of course, the confidence actually breaks down. The person on the top left for example is completely unrelated. But covering the face of the owner or seeming owner also causes a reduction in the confidence. So you might argue that dog owners start to become similar to their dogs. No, this is also a confounder!

“Why am I here?” – “Your life is the sum of a remainder of an unbalanced equation inherent to the programming of the matrix. You are the eventuality of an anomaly which despite my sincerest efforts, I have been unable to eliminate from what is otherwise a harmony of mathematical precision.” Image created using gifify. Source: YouTube.

Well, let’s look into a third technique. Here, we want to find the maximal activations of specific layers or neurons. The idea here is that we just look at the patches that have been shown to a network and we order them by activation in a specific neuron.

Maximally activating patches find image parts that a layer or neuron “likes”. Image under CC BY 4.0 from the Deep Learning Lecture.

What you can then generate are sequences like this one. So, you see that this specific neuron has been activated with 0.1, 0.9, 0.9, 0.8, 0.8, and you can see these were the patches that were maximally activating this neuron. So, you could argue: “Well, it’s a god face detector, or is it a dark sport detector.”

Maximally activating patches still may be difficult to interpret. Image under CC BY 4.0 from the Deep Learning Lecture.

So, you could very easily figure out what “false friends” are. This is comparatively easy to find, but the drawback is of course that you don’t necessarily get a semantic meaning. You could argue that these forms are the base vectors of representation. Here, we have another example and you could say “Well, what kind of detector is? This is a red flower and tomato sauce detector. Or is this a detector for specular highlights?” Well, at least you can figure out which neuron is related to what kind of input. So, you kind of get some feeling what’s happening in the network and which things cluster together.

“While it remains a burden assiduously avoided, it is not unexpected and that’s not beyond a measure of control which has led you inexorably here.” – “You haven’t answered my question.” – “Quite right. Interesting.” Image created using gifify. Source: YouTube.

Speaking of clustering: Then you can also actually use the clustering of inputs to visualize how similar different inputs are for a specific deep network. This leads to the T stochastic neighborhood embedding visualization technique.

t-SNE creates maps of input images for a specific network. Image under CC BY 4.0 from the Deep Learning Lecture.

Now here, the idea is that you compute the activations of the last layer and group the inputs with respect to their similarity in the last layer activation. So, you essentially perform dimensionality of the last layer activations. These are the ones that are relevant for the classification and are likely to encode the feature representation of your trained network. Then, you actually perform this dimensionality reduction technique and produce a 2-D map.

Exploring a t-SNE map. Image created using gifify. Source: YouTube.

This allows you to see what your network thinks are similar inputs. So, this is, of course, an embedding of a very high dimensional space in 2-D. There’s, of course, a lot of loss of information. If you do this, still the technique is very interesting. If I zoom in into different parts here, you can see that we actually form clusters of different categories in this kind of dimensionality reduction. So, you can see that images that are perceived similarly by the neural network are also located in a direct neighborhood. The dimensionality reduction that we do reveals the internal representations. Actually, if you look at those neighborhoods, they kind of make sense. So, this is actually something that helps us to understand and develop confidence in the feature extraction that our deep neural network is doing.

“The matrix is older than you know.” – “In the 80s I thought about how to build this machine that learns to solve all these problems.” – “There are only two possible explanations: Either nobody told me or no one knows.” – “Precisely.” Image created using gifify. Source: YouTube.

None of the presented techniques so far was really satisfying. So, next time in deep learning, we want to talk about more visualization methods. In particular, we want to look into gradient-based procedures. So, we want to use a kind of backpropagation-type idea in order to create visualizations. Other interesting approaches are optimization-based techniques. Here, we are actually very close to what we’ve already seen in the adversarial examples. So, thank you very much for listening and see you in the next video. Bye-bye!

More exciting things coming up in this deep learning lecture. Image under CC BY 4.0 from the Deep Learning Lecture.

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“Bullshit!” – “Denial is the most predictable of all human responses. But rest assured, this will be the sixth time we have destroyed it and we have become exceedingly efficient at this.” – “There is no notion of evil in that context, other than the fact that people die.” Image created using gifify. Source: YouTube.

Links

Yosinski et al.: Deep Visualization Toolbox
Olah et al.: Feature Visualization
Adam Harley: MNIST Demo

References

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