This repo contains the Pytorch implementation of our paper:
SCAN: Learning to Classify Images without Labels
Wouter Van Gansbeke, Simon Vandenhende, Stamatios Georgoulis, Marc Proesmans and Luc Van Gool.
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Accepted at ECCV 2020 (Slides). Watch the explanation of our paper by Yannic Kilcher on YouTube.
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π SOTA on 4 benchmarks. Check out Papers With Code for Image Clustering or Unsup. Classification.
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π Interested in unsupervised semantic segmentation? Check out our recent work: MaskContrast.
π Tutorial section has been added, checkout TUTORIAL.md.
π Prior work section has been added, checkout Problems Prior Work.
Can we automatically group images into semantically meaningful clusters when ground-truth annotations are absent? The task of unsupervised image classification remains an important, and open challenge in computer vision. Several recent approaches have tried to tackle this problem in an end-to-end fashion. In this paper, we deviate from recent works, and advocate a two-step approach where feature learning and clustering are decoupled.
We outperform state-of-the-art methods by large margins, in particular +26.6% on CIFAR10, +25.0% on CIFAR100-20 and +21.3% on STL10 in terms of classification accuracy. Our method is the first to perform well on ImageNet (1000 classes). Check out the benchmarks on the Papers-with-code website for Image Clustering and Unsupervised Image Classification.
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Train set includes test set: We would like to point out that most prior work in unsupervised classification use both the train and test set during training. We believe this is bad practice and therefore propose to only train on the training set. The final numbers should be reported on the test set (see table 3 of our paper). This also allows us to directly compare with supervised and semi-supervised methods in the literature. We encourage future work to do the same. So our numbers are expected to be better when we also include the test set for training.
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Reproducibility: We noticed that prior work is very initialization sensitive. So, we don't think reporting a single number is therefore fair. We report our results as the mean and standard deviation over 10 runs.
Please follow the instructions underneath to perform semantic clustering with SCAN.
The code runs with recent Pytorch versions, e.g. 1.4. Assuming Anaconda, the most important packages can be installed as:
conda install pytorch=1.4.0 torchvision=0.5.0 cudatoolkit=10.0 -c pytorch
conda install matplotlib scipy scikit-learn # For evaluation and confusion matrix visualization
conda install faiss-gpu # For efficient nearest neighbors search
conda install pyyaml easydict # For using config files
conda install termcolor # For colored print statements
We refer to the requirements.txt
file for an overview of the packages in the environment we used to produce our results.
The following files need to be adapted in order to run the code on your own machine:
- Change the file paths to the datasets in
utils/mypath.py
, e.g./path/to/cifar10
. - Specify the output directory in
configs/env.yml
. All results will be stored under this directory.
Our experimental evaluation includes the following datasets: CIFAR10, CIFAR100-20, STL10 and ImageNet. The ImageNet dataset should be downloaded separately and saved to the path described in utils/mypath.py
. Other datasets will be downloaded automatically and saved to the correct path when missing.
The configuration files can be found in the configs/
directory. The training procedure consists of the following steps:
- STEP 1: Solve the pretext task i.e.
simclr.py
- STEP 2: Perform the clustering step i.e.
scan.py
- STEP 3: Perform the self-labeling step i.e.
selflabel.py
For example, run the following commands sequentially to perform our method on CIFAR10:
python simclr.py --config_env configs/your_env.yml --config_exp configs/pretext/simclr_cifar10.yml
python scan.py --config_env configs/your_env.yml --config_exp configs/scan/scan_cifar10.yml
python selflabel.py --config_env configs/your_env.yml --config_exp configs/selflabel/selflabel_cifar10.yml
The provided hyperparameters are identical for CIFAR10, CIFAR100-20 and STL10. However, fine-tuning the hyperparameters can further improve the results. We list the most important hyperparameters of our method below:
- Entropy weight: Can be adapted when the number of clusters changes. In general, try to avoid imbalanced clusters during training.
- Confidence threshold: When every cluster contains a sufficiently large amount of confident samples, it can be beneficial to increase the threshold. This generally helps to decrease the noise. The ablation can be found in the paper.
- Number of neighbors in SCAN: The dependency on this hyperparameter is rather small as shown in the paper.
We perform the instance discrimination task in accordance with the scheme from SimCLR on CIFAR10, CIFAR100 and STL10. Pretrained models can be downloaded from the links listed below. On ImageNet, we use the pretrained weights provided by MoCo and transfer them to be compatible with our code repository.
Dataset | Download link |
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CIFAR10 | Download |
CIFAR100 | Download |
STL10 | Download |
We provide the following pretrained models after training with the SCAN-loss, and after the self-labeling step. The best models can be found here and we futher refer to the paper for the averages and standard deviations.
Dataset | Step | ACC | NMI | ARI | Download link |
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CIFAR10 | SCAN-loss | 81.6 | 71.5 | 66.5 | Download |
Self-labeling | 88.3 | 79.7 | 77.2 | Download | |
CIFAR100 | SCAN-loss | 44.0 | 44.9 | 28.3 | Download |
Self-labeling | 50.7 | 48.6 | 33.3 | Download | |
STL10 | SCAN-loss | 79.2 | 67.3 | 61.8 | Download |
Self-labeling | 80.9 | 69.8 | 64.6 | Download | |
ImageNet-50 | SCAN-loss | 75.1 | 80.5 | 63.5 | Download |
Self-labeling | 76.8 | 82.2 | 66.1 | Download | |
ImageNet-100 | SCAN-loss | 66.2 | 78.7 | 54.4 | Download |
Self-labeling | 68.9 | 80.8 | 57.6 | Download | |
ImageNet-200 | SCAN-loss | 56.3 | 75.7 | 44.1 | Download |
Self-labeling | 58.1 | 77.2 | 47.0 | Download |
We also train SCAN on ImageNet for 1000 clusters. We use 10 clusterheads and finally take the head with the lowest loss. The accuracy (ACC), normalized mutual information (NMI), adjusted mutual information (AMI) and adjusted rand index (ARI) are computed:
Method | ACC | NMI | AMI | ARI | Download link |
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SCAN (ResNet50) | 39.9 | 72.0 | 51.2 | 27.5 | Download |
Pretrained models from the model zoo can be evaluated using the eval.py
script. For example, the model on cifar-10 can be evaluated as follows:
python eval.py --config_exp configs/scan/scan_cifar10.yml --model $MODEL_PATH
Visualizing the prototype images is easily done by setting the --visualize_prototypes
flag. For example on cifar-10:
Similarly, you might want to have a look at the clusters found on ImageNet (as shown at the top). First download the model (link in table above) and then execute the following command:
python eval.py --config_exp configs/scan/imagenet_eval.yml --model $MODEL_PATH_IMAGENET
If you want to see another (more detailed) example for STL-10, checkout TUTORIAL.md. It provides a detailed guide and includes visualizations and log files with the training progress.
If you find this repo useful for your research, please consider citing our paper:
@inproceedings{vangansbeke2020scan,
title={Scan: Learning to classify images without labels},
author={Van Gansbeke, Wouter and Vandenhende, Simon and Georgoulis, Stamatios and Proesmans, Marc and Van Gool, Luc},
booktitle={Proceedings of the European Conference on Computer Vision},
year={2020}
}
For any enquiries, please contact the main authors.
This software is released under a creative commons license which allows for personal and research use only. For a commercial license please contact the authors. You can view a license summary here.
This work was supported by Toyota, and was carried out at the TRACE Lab at KU Leuven (Toyota Research on Automated Cars in Europe - Leuven).