Accurate, reliable and fast robustness evaluation

Abstract

Throughout the past five years, the susceptibility of neural networks to minimal adversarial perturbations has moved from a peculiar phenomenon to a core issue in Deep Learning. Despite much attention, however, progress towards more robust models is significantly impaired by the difficulty of evaluating the robustness of neural network models. Today’s methods are either fast but brittle (gradient-based attacks), or they are fairly reliable but slow (score-and decision-based attacks). We here develop a new set of gradient-based adversarial attacks which (a) are more reliable in the face of gradient-masking than other gradient-based attacks,(b) perform better and are more query efficient than current state-of-the-art gradient-based attacks,(c) can be flexibly adapted to a wide range of adversarial criteria and (d) require virtually no hyperparameter tuning. These findings are carefully validated across a diverse set of six different models and hold for L0, L1, L2 and Linf in both targeted as well as untargeted scenarios. Implementations will soon be available in all major toolboxes (Foolbox, CleverHans and ART). We hope that this class of attacks will make robustness evaluations easier and more reliable, thus contributing to more signal in the search for more robust machine learning models.

Matthias Kümmerer
Matthias Kümmerer
Postdoc

I’m interested in understanding how we use eye movements to gather information about our environment. This includes building saliency models and models of eye movement prediction such as my line of DeepGaze models. I also work on the question of how to evaluate model quality and benchmarking and I’m the main organizer of the MIT/Tuebingen Saliency Benchmark.

Matthias Bethge
Matthias Bethge
Professor for Computational Neuroscience and Machine Learning & Director of the Tübingen AI Center

Matthias Bethge is Professor for Computational Neuroscience and Machine Learning at the University of Tübingen and director of the Tübingen AI Center, a joint center between Tübingen University and MPI for Intelligent Systems that is part of the German AI strategy.