Max-sliced wasserstein distance and its use for gans

I Deshpande, YT Hu, R Sun, A Pyrros… - Proceedings of the …, 2019 - openaccess.thecvf.com
Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF conference on computer vision and …, 2019openaccess.thecvf.com
Generative adversarial nets (GANs) and variational auto-encoders have significantly
improved our distribution modeling capabilities, showing promise for dataset augmentation,
image-to-image translation and feature learning. However, to model high-dimensional
distributions, sequential training and stacked architectures are common, increasing the
number of tunable hyper-parameters as well as the training time. Nonetheless, the sample
complexity of the distance metrics remains one of the factors affecting GAN training. We first …
Abstract
Generative adversarial nets (GANs) and variational auto-encoders have significantly improved our distribution modeling capabilities, showing promise for dataset augmentation, image-to-image translation and feature learning. However, to model high-dimensional distributions, sequential training and stacked architectures are common, increasing the number of tunable hyper-parameters as well as the training time. Nonetheless, the sample complexity of the distance metrics remains one of the factors affecting GAN training. We first show that the recently proposed sliced Wasserstein distance has compelling sample complexity properties when compared to the Wasserstein distance. To further improve the sliced Wasserstein distance we then analyze itsprojection complexity'and develop the max-sliced Wasserstein distance which enjoys compelling sample complexity while reducing projection complexity, albeit necessitating a max estimation. We finally illustrate that the proposed distance trains GANs on high-dimensional images up to a resolution of 256x256 easily.
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