Unsupervised Semantic Attribute Discovery and Control in Generative Models

02/25/2020
by   William Paul, et al.
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This work focuses on the ability to control via latent space factors semantic image attributes in generative models, and the faculty to discover mappings from factors to attributes in an unsupervised fashion. The discovery of controllable semantic attributes is of special importance, as it would facilitate higher level tasks such as unsupervised representation learning to improve anomaly detection, or the controlled generation of novel data for domain shift and imbalanced datasets. The ability to control semantic attributes is related to the disentanglement of latent factors, which dictates that latent factors be "uncorrelated" in their effects. Unfortunately, despite past progress, the connection between control and disentanglement remains, at best, confused and entangled, requiring clarifications we hope to provide in this work. To this end, we study the design of algorithms for image generation that allow unsupervised discovery and control of semantic attributes.We make several contributions: a) We bring order to the concepts of control and disentanglement, by providing an analytical derivation that connects mutual information maximization, which promotes attribute control, to total correlation minimization, which relates to disentanglement. b) We propose hybrid generative model architectures that use mutual information maximization with multi-scale style transfer. c) We introduce a novel metric to characterize the performance of semantic attributes control. We report experiments that appear to demonstrate, quantitatively and qualitatively, the ability of the proposed model to perform satisfactory control while still preserving competitive visual quality. We compare to other state of the art methods (e.g., Frechet inception distance (FID)= 9.90 on CelebA and 4.52 on EyePACS).

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