This work tackles the problem of semi-supervised learning of image classifiers. Our main insight is that the field of semi-supervised learning can benefit from the quickly advancing field of self-supervised visual representation learning. Unifying these two approaches, we propose the framework of self-supervised semi-supervised learning (S 4 L) and use it to derive two novel semi-supervised image classification methods. We demonstrate the effectiveness of these methods in comparison to both carefully tuned baselines, and existing semi-supervised learning methods. We then show that S 4 L and existing semi-supervised methods can be jointly trained, yielding a new state-of-the-art result on semi-supervised ILSVRC-2012 with 10% of labels.
Consistency regularization is a technique for semi-supervised learning that has recently been shown to yield strong results for classification with few labeled data. The method works by perturbing input data using augmentation or adversarial examples, and encouraging the learned model to be robust to these perturbations on unlabeled data. Here, we evaluate the use of a recently proposed augmentation method, called CowMask (French et al., 2019), for this purpose. Using CowMask as the augmentation method in semi-supervised consistency regularization, we establish a new state-of-the-art result on Imagenet with 10% labeled data, with a top-5 error of 8.76% and top-1 error of 26.06%. Moreover, we do so with a method that is much simpler than alternative methods. We further investigate the behavior of CowMask for semi-supervised learning by running many smaller scale experiments on the small image benchmarks SVHN, CIFAR-10 and CIFAR-100, where we achieve results competitive with the state of the art, and where we find evidence that the CowMask perturbation is widely applicable. We open source our code at https://github.com/ google-research/google-research/ tree/master/milking_cowmask.
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