Understanding and Increasing Efficiency of Frank-Wolfe Adversarial Training

Deep neural networks are easily fooled by small perturbations known as adversarial attacks. Adversarial Training (AT) is a technique that approximately solves a robust optimization problem to minimize the worst-case loss and is widely regarded as the most effective defense against such attacks. Due...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in2022 IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR) pp. 50 - 59
Main Authors Tsiligkaridis, Theodoros, Roberts, Jay
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 01.06.2022
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Summary:Deep neural networks are easily fooled by small perturbations known as adversarial attacks. Adversarial Training (AT) is a technique that approximately solves a robust optimization problem to minimize the worst-case loss and is widely regarded as the most effective defense against such attacks. Due to the high computation time for generating strong adversarial examples in the AT process, single-step approaches have been proposed to reduce training time. However, these methods suffer from catastrophic overfitting where adversarial accuracy drops during training, and although improvements have been proposed, they increase training time and robustness is far from that of multi-step AT. We develop a theoretical frameworkfor adversarial training with FW optimization (FW-AT) that reveals a geometric connection between the loss landscape and the distortion of l-inf FW attacks (the attack's l-2 norm). Specifically, we analytically show that high distortion of FW attacks is equivalent to small gradient variation along the attack path. It is then experimentally demonstrated on various deep neural network architectures that l-inf attacks against robust models achieve near maximal l-2 distortion, while standard networks have lower distortion. Furthermore, it is experimentally shown that catastrophic overfitting is strongly correlated with low distortion of FW attacks. This mathematical transparency differentiates FW from the more popular Projected Gradient Descent (PGD) optimization. To demonstrate the utility of our theoretical framework we develop FW-AT-Adapt, a novel adversarial training algorithm which uses a simple distortion measure to adapt the number of attack steps during training to increase efficiency without compromising robustness. FW-AT-Adapt provides training time on par with single-step fast AT methods and improves closing the gap between fast AT methods and multi-step PGD-AT with minimal loss in adversarial accuracy in white-box and black-box settings.
ISSN:2575-7075
DOI:10.1109/CVPR52688.2022.00015