TY - JOUR
T1 - Instance-dependent Label Distribution Estimation for Learning with Label Noise
AU - Liao, Zehui
AU - Hu, Shishuai
AU - Xie, Yutong
AU - Xia, Yong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2024.
PY - 2025/5
Y1 - 2025/5
N2 - Noise transition matrix estimation is a promising approach for learning with label noise. It can infer clean posterior probabilities, known as Label Distribution (LD), based on noisy ones and reduce the impact of noisy labels. However, this estimation is challenging, since the ground truth labels are not always available. Most existing methods estimate a global noise transition matrix using either correctly labeled samples (anchor points) or detected reliable samples (pseudo anchor points). These methods heavily rely on the existence of anchor points or the quality of pseudo ones, and the global noise transition matrix can hardly provide accurate label transition information for each sample, since the label noise in real applications is mostly instance-dependent. To address these challenges, we propose an Instance-dependent Label Distribution Estimation (ILDE) method to learn from noisy labels for image classification. The method’s workflow has three major steps. First, we estimate each sample’s noisy posterior probability, supervised by noisy labels. Second, since mislabeling probability closely correlates with inter-class correlation, we compute the inter-class correlation matrix to estimate the noise transition matrix, bypassing the need for (pseudo) anchor points. Moreover, for a precise approximation of the instance-dependent noise transition matrix, we calculate the inter-class correlation matrix using only mini-batch samples rather than the entire training dataset. Third, we transform the noisy posterior probability into instance-dependent LD by multiplying it with the estimated noise transition matrix, using the resulting LD for enhanced supervision to prevent DCNNs from memorizing noisy labels. The proposed ILDE method has been evaluated against several state-of-the-art methods on two synthetic and three real-world noisy datasets. Our results indicate that the proposed ILDE method outperforms all competing methods, no matter whether the noise is synthetic or real noise.
AB - Noise transition matrix estimation is a promising approach for learning with label noise. It can infer clean posterior probabilities, known as Label Distribution (LD), based on noisy ones and reduce the impact of noisy labels. However, this estimation is challenging, since the ground truth labels are not always available. Most existing methods estimate a global noise transition matrix using either correctly labeled samples (anchor points) or detected reliable samples (pseudo anchor points). These methods heavily rely on the existence of anchor points or the quality of pseudo ones, and the global noise transition matrix can hardly provide accurate label transition information for each sample, since the label noise in real applications is mostly instance-dependent. To address these challenges, we propose an Instance-dependent Label Distribution Estimation (ILDE) method to learn from noisy labels for image classification. The method’s workflow has three major steps. First, we estimate each sample’s noisy posterior probability, supervised by noisy labels. Second, since mislabeling probability closely correlates with inter-class correlation, we compute the inter-class correlation matrix to estimate the noise transition matrix, bypassing the need for (pseudo) anchor points. Moreover, for a precise approximation of the instance-dependent noise transition matrix, we calculate the inter-class correlation matrix using only mini-batch samples rather than the entire training dataset. Third, we transform the noisy posterior probability into instance-dependent LD by multiplying it with the estimated noise transition matrix, using the resulting LD for enhanced supervision to prevent DCNNs from memorizing noisy labels. The proposed ILDE method has been evaluated against several state-of-the-art methods on two synthetic and three real-world noisy datasets. Our results indicate that the proposed ILDE method outperforms all competing methods, no matter whether the noise is synthetic or real noise.
KW - Inter-class correlation
KW - Label distribution
KW - Label noise
KW - Noise transition matrix
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105003156001&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11263-024-02299-x
DO - 10.1007/s11263-024-02299-x
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105003156001
SN - 0920-5691
VL - 133
SP - 2568
EP - 2580
JO - International Journal of Computer Vision
JF - International Journal of Computer Vision
IS - 5
M1 - 106771
ER -