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Data augmentation and image understanding / Datenerweiterung und Bildverständnis

Interdisciplinary research is often at the core of scientific progress. This dissertation explores some advantageous synergies between machine learning, cognitive science and neuroscience. In particular, this thesis focuses on vision and images. The human visual system has been widely studied from both behavioural and neuroscientific points of view, as vision is the dominant sense of most people. In turn, machine vision has also been an active area of research, currently dominated by the use of artificial neural networks. This work focuses on learning representations that are more aligned with visual perception and the biological vision. For that purpose, I have studied tools and aspects from cognitive science and computational neuroscience, and attempted to incorporate them into machine learning models of vision.

A central subject of this dissertation is data augmentation, a commonly used technique for training artificial neural networks to augment the size of data sets through transformations of the images. Although often overlooked, data augmentation implements transformations that are perceptually plausible, since they correspond to the transformations we see in our visual world–changes in viewpoint or illumination, for instance. Furthermore, neuroscientists have found that the brain invariantly represents objects under these transformations. Throughout this dissertation, I use these insights to analyse data augmentation as a particularly useful inductive bias, a more effective regularisation method for artificial neural networks, and as the framework to analyse and improve the invariance of vision models to perceptually plausible transformations. Overall, this work aims to shed more light on the properties of data augmentation and demonstrate the potential of interdisciplinary research.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uni-osnabrueck.de/oai:osnadocs.ub.uni-osnabrueck.de:ds-202202186397
Date18 February 2022
CreatorsHernandez-Garcia, Alex
ContributorsProf. Dr. Peter König, Prof. Dr. Konrad P. Kording, Prof. Graham W. Taylor, PhD, Prof. Jeffrey Bowers, PhD
Source SetsUniversität Osnabrück
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typedoc-type:doctoralThesis
Formatapplication/zip, application/pdf
RightsAttribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Germany, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/de/

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