Factorized Contrastive Learning: Going Beyond Multi-View Redundancy

Abstract

In a wide range of multimodal tasks, contrastive learning has become a particularly appealing approach since it can successfully learn representations from abundant unlabeled data with only pairing information (e.g., image-caption or video-audio pairs). Underpinning these approaches is the assumption of multi-view redundancy - that shared information between modalities is necessary and sufficient for downstream tasks. However, in many real-world settings, task-relevant information is also contained in modality-unique regions: information that is only present in one modality but still relevant to the task. How can we learn self-supervised multimodal representations to capture both shared and unique information relevant to downstream tasks? This paper proposes FactorCL, a new multimodal representation learning method to go beyond multi-view redundancy. FactorCL is built from three new contributions: (1) factorizing task-relevant information into shared and unique representations, (2) capturing task-relevant information via maximizing MI lower bounds and removing task-irrelevant information via minimizing MI upper bounds, and (3) multimodal data augmentations to approximate task relevance without labels. On large-scale real-world datasets, FactorCL captures both shared and unique information and achieves state-of-the-art results on six benchmarks.

Cite

Text

Liang et al. "Factorized Contrastive Learning: Going Beyond Multi-View Redundancy." Neural Information Processing Systems, 2023.

Markdown

[Liang et al. "Factorized Contrastive Learning: Going Beyond Multi-View Redundancy." Neural Information Processing Systems, 2023.](https://mlanthology.org/neurips/2023/liang2023neurips-factorized/)

BibTeX

@inproceedings{liang2023neurips-factorized,
  title     = {{Factorized Contrastive Learning: Going Beyond Multi-View Redundancy}},
  author    = {Liang, Paul Pu and Deng, Zihao and Ma, Martin Q. and Zou, James Y and Morency, Louis-Philippe and Salakhutdinov, Ruslan},
  booktitle = {Neural Information Processing Systems},
  year      = {2023},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/neurips/2023/liang2023neurips-factorized/}
}