In this work, we introduce attention as a state-of-the-art mechanism for classification of radio galaxies, using convolutional neural networks. We present an attention-based model that performs on par with previous classifiers while using more than 50 per cent fewer parameters than the next smallest classic CNN application in this field. We demonstrate quantitatively how the selection of normalization and aggregation methods used in attention-gating can affect the output of individual models, and show that the resulting attention maps can be used to interpret the classification choices made by the model. We observe that the salient regions identified by the our model align well with the regions an expert human classifier would attend to make equivalent classifications. We show that while the selection of normalization and aggregation may only minimally affect the performance of individual models, it can significantly affect the interpretability of the respective attention maps and by selecting a model which aligns well with how astronomers classify radio sources by eye, a user can employ the model in a more effective manner.
We present a model for generating postage stamp images of synthetic Fanaroff-Riley Class I and Class II radio galaxies suitable for use in simulations of future radio surveys such as those being developed for the Square Kilometre Array. This model uses a fully-connected neural network to implement structured variational inference through a variational auto-encoder and decoder architecture. In order to optimise the dimensionality of the latent space for the auto-encoder we introduce the radio morphology inception score (RAMIS), a quantitative method for assessing the quality of generated images, and discuss in detail how data pre-processing choices can affect the value of this measure. We examine the 2-dimensional latent space of the VAEs and discuss how this can be used to control the generation of synthetic populations, whilst also cautioning how it may lead to biases when used for data augmentation.
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