A STUDY OF ALIGNMENT MECHANISMS IN ADVERSARIAL DOMAIN ADAPTATION
Rodrigue Siry, Loic Simon, Frederic Jurie
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Adversarial approaches (e.g. DANN [1]) are currently considered to be the most promising avenue for unsupervised domain adaptation. They aim at building a common representation space between the domains, to both i) align the source and target domains, and, ii) allow for good class discrimination in this common space. We show in this paper that this mapping to a common space can be done in different ways, and propose 5 different implementations whose performance are evaluated and compared. To this end, we have designed different datasets/problems allowing us to make a critical analysis of the mappings and to draw some conclusions. These experiments have highlighted a second phenomenon, also little studied in the literature, which has nevertheless a major influence on the alignment performance: the inability to adapt when informative features for target are not already extracted through supervision on source. The paper provides a thorough analysis of this phenomenon.