Abstract
Unsupervised domain adaptation (UDA) methods, based on adversarial learning, employ the means of implicit global and class-aware domain alignment to learn the symmetry between source and target domains and facilitate the transfer of knowledge from a labeled source domain to an unlabeled target domain. However, these methods still face misalignment and poor target generalization due to small inter-class domain discrepancy and large intra-class discrepancy of target features. To tackle these challenges, we introduce a novel adversarial learning-based UDA framework named Coding Rate Reduction Adversarial Domain Adaptation (CR2ADA) to better learn the symmetry between source and target domains. Integrating conditional domain adversarial networks with domain-specific batch normalization, CR2ADA learns robust domain-invariant features to implement global domain alignment. For discriminative class-aware domain alignment, we propose the global and local coding rate reduction methods in CR2ADA to maximize inter-class domain discrepancy and minimize intra-class discrepancy of target features. Additionally, CR2ADA combines minimum class confusion and mutual information to further regularize the diversity and discriminability of the learned features. The effectiveness of CR2ADA is demonstrated through experiments on four UDA datasets. The code can be obtained through email or GitHub.
Published Version
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