View a PDF of the paper titled What Makes CLIP More Robust to Long-Tailed Pre-Training Data? A Controlled Study for Transferable Insights, by Xin Wen and 4 other authors
Abstract:Severe data imbalance naturally exists among web-scale vision-language datasets. Despite this, we find CLIP pre-trained thereupon exhibits notable robustness to the data imbalance compared to supervised learning, and demonstrates significant effectiveness in learning generalizable representations. With an aim to investigate the reasons behind this finding, we conduct controlled experiments to study various underlying factors, and reveal that CLIP’s pretext task forms a dynamic classification problem wherein only a subset of classes is present in training. This isolates the bias from dominant classes and implicitly balances the learning signal. Furthermore, the robustness and discriminability of CLIP improve with more descriptive language supervision, larger data scale, and broader open-world concepts, which are inaccessible to supervised learning. Our study not only uncovers the mechanisms behind CLIP’s generalizability beyond data imbalance but also provides transferable insights for the research community. The findings are validated in both supervised and self-supervised learning, enabling models trained on imbalanced data to achieve CLIP-level performance on diverse recognition tasks. Code and data are available at: this https URL.
Submission history
From: Xin Wen [view email]
[v1]
Fri, 31 May 2024 17:57:24 UTC (1,529 KB)
[v2]
Fri, 14 Jun 2024 16:42:47 UTC (1,529 KB)
[v3]
Sun, 27 Oct 2024 23:53:20 UTC (1,538 KB)
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