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Memorization in deep learning: A survey

Machine Learning 2024-06-07 v1 Artificial Intelligence

Abstract

Deep Learning (DL) powered by Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) has revolutionized various domains, yet understanding the intricacies of DNN decision-making and learning processes remains a significant challenge. Recent investigations have uncovered an interesting memorization phenomenon in which DNNs tend to memorize specific details from examples rather than learning general patterns, affecting model generalization, security, and privacy. This raises critical questions about the nature of generalization in DNNs and their susceptibility to security breaches. In this survey, we present a systematic framework to organize memorization definitions based on the generalization and security/privacy domains and summarize memorization evaluation methods at both the example and model levels. Through a comprehensive literature review, we explore DNN memorization behaviors and their impacts on security and privacy. We also introduce privacy vulnerabilities caused by memorization and the phenomenon of forgetting and explore its connection with memorization. Furthermore, we spotlight various applications leveraging memorization and forgetting mechanisms, including noisy label learning, privacy preservation, and model enhancement. This survey offers the first-in-kind understanding of memorization in DNNs, providing insights into its challenges and opportunities for enhancing AI development while addressing critical ethical concerns.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2406.03880,
  title  = {Memorization in deep learning: A survey},
  author = {Jiaheng Wei and Yanjun Zhang and Leo Yu Zhang and Ming Ding and Chao Chen and Kok-Leong Ong and Jun Zhang and Yang Xiang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2406.03880},
  year   = {2024}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T16:55:33.659Z