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Poster

Make Some Noise: Reliable and Efficient Single-Step Adversarial Training

Pau de Jorge Aranda · Adel Bibi · Riccardo Volpi · Amartya Sanyal · Philip Torr · Gregory Rogez · Puneet Dokania

Hall J (level 1) #708

Keywords: [ FGSM ] [ catastrophic overfitting ] [ Efficient Adversarial Training ] [ Fast Adversarial Training ] [ Single-Step Adversarial Training ]


Abstract: Recently, Wong et al. (2020) showed that adversarial training with single-step FGSM leads to a characteristic failure mode named catastrophic overfitting (CO), in which a model becomes suddenly vulnerable to multi-step attacks. Experimentally they showed that simply adding a random perturbation prior to FGSM (RS-FGSM) could prevent CO. However, Andriushchenko & Flammarion (2020) observed that RS-FGSM still leads to CO for larger perturbations, and proposed a computationally expensive regularizer (GradAlign) to avoid it. In this work, we methodically revisit the role of noise and clipping in single-step adversarial training. Contrary to previous intuitions, we find that using a stronger noise around the clean sample combined with \textit{not clipping} is highly effective in avoiding CO for large perturbation radii. We then propose Noise-FGSM (N-FGSM) that, while providing the benefits of single-step adversarial training, does not suffer from CO. Empirical analyses on a large suite of experiments show that N-FGSM is able to match or surpass the performance of previous state of-the-art GradAlign while achieving 3$\times$ speed-up.

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