Deep Clustering by Semantic Contrastive Learning

3 Mar 2021  ·  Jiabo Huang, Shaogang Gong ·

Whilst contrastive learning has recently brought notable benefits to deep clustering of unlabelled images by learning sample-specific discriminative visual features, its potential for explicitly inferring class decision boundaries is less well understood. This is because its instance discrimination strategy is not class sensitive, therefore, the clusters derived on the resulting sample-specific feature space are not optimised for corresponding to meaningful class decision boundaries. In this work, we solve this problem by introducing Semantic Contrastive Learning (SCL). SCL imposes explicitly distance-based cluster structures on unlabelled training data by formulating a semantic (cluster-aware) contrastive learning objective. Moreover, we introduce a clustering consistency condition to be satisfied jointly by both instance visual similarities and cluster decision boundaries, and concurrently optimising both to reason about the hypotheses of semantic ground-truth classes (unknown/unlabelled) on-the-fly by their consensus. This semantic contrastive learning approach to discovering unknown class decision boundaries has considerable advantages to unsupervised learning of object recognition tasks. Extensive experiments show that SCL outperforms state-of-the-art contrastive learning and deep clustering methods on six object recognition benchmarks, especially on the more challenging finer-grained and larger datasets.

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