An Efficient Strategy for Catastrophic Forgetting Reduction in Incremental Learning

Author:

Doan Huong-Giang1ORCID,Luong Hong-Quan2,Ha Thi-Oanh2,Pham Thi Thanh Thuy3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Control and Automation, Electric Power University, Hanoi 11300, Vietnam

2. MQ Information and Communication Technology Solutions JSC, Hanoi 11700, Vietnam

3. Faculty of Information Security, Academy of People Security, Hanoi 12100, Vietnam

Abstract

Deep neural networks (DNNs) have made outstanding achievements in a wide variety of domains. For deep learning tasks, large enough datasets are required for training efficient DNN models. However, big datasets are not always available, and they are costly to build. Therefore, balanced solutions for DNN model efficiency and training data size have caught the attention of researchers recently. Transfer learning techniques are the most common for this. In transfer learning, a DNN model is pre-trained on a large enough dataset and then applied to a new task with modest data. This fine-tuning process yields another challenge, named catastrophic forgetting. However, it can be reduced using a reasonable strategy for data argumentation in incremental learning. In this paper, we propose an efficient solution for the random selection of samples from the old task to be incrementally stored for learning a sequence of new tasks. In addition, a loss combination strategy is also proposed for optimizing incremental learning. The proposed solutions are evaluated on standard datasets with two scenarios of incremental fine-tuning: (1) New Class (NC) dataset; (2) New Class and new Instance (NCI) dataset. The experimental results show that our proposed solution achieves outstanding results compared with other SOTA rehearsal methods, as well as traditional fine-tuning solutions, ranging from 1% to 16% in recognition accuracy.

Funder

Viet Nam government

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Computer Networks and Communications,Hardware and Architecture,Signal Processing,Control and Systems Engineering

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