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End-to-end Kernel Learning via Generative Random Fourier Features

Published 10 Sep 2020 in cs.LG and stat.ML | (2009.04614v5)

Abstract: Random Fourier features (RFFs) provide a promising way for kernel learning in a spectral case. Current RFFs-based kernel learning methods usually work in a two-stage way. In the first-stage process, learning the optimal feature map is often formulated as a target alignment problem, which aims to align the learned kernel with the pre-defined target kernel (usually the ideal kernel). In the second-stage process, a linear learner is conducted with respect to the mapped random features. Nevertheless, the pre-defined kernel in target alignment is not necessarily optimal for the generalization of the linear learner. Instead, in this paper, we consider a one-stage process that incorporates the kernel learning and linear learner into a unifying framework. To be specific, a generative network via RFFs is devised to implicitly learn the kernel, followed by a linear classifier parameterized as a full-connected layer. Then the generative network and the classifier are jointly trained by solving the empirical risk minimization (ERM) problem to reach a one-stage solution. This end-to-end scheme naturally allows deeper features, in correspondence to a multi-layer structure, and shows superior generalization performance over the classical two-stage, RFFs-based methods in real-world classification tasks. Moreover, inspired by the randomized resampling mechanism of the proposed method, its enhanced adversarial robustness is investigated and experimentally verified.

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