English

Knowledge Distillation Meets Self-Supervision

Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2020-07-14 v2

Abstract

Knowledge distillation, which involves extracting the "dark knowledge" from a teacher network to guide the learning of a student network, has emerged as an important technique for model compression and transfer learning. Unlike previous works that exploit architecture-specific cues such as activation and attention for distillation, here we wish to explore a more general and model-agnostic approach for extracting "richer dark knowledge" from the pre-trained teacher model. We show that the seemingly different self-supervision task can serve as a simple yet powerful solution. For example, when performing contrastive learning between transformed entities, the noisy predictions of the teacher network reflect its intrinsic composition of semantic and pose information. By exploiting the similarity between those self-supervision signals as an auxiliary task, one can effectively transfer the hidden information from the teacher to the student. In this paper, we discuss practical ways to exploit those noisy self-supervision signals with selective transfer for distillation. We further show that self-supervision signals improve conventional distillation with substantial gains under few-shot and noisy-label scenarios. Given the richer knowledge mined from self-supervision, our knowledge distillation approach achieves state-of-the-art performance on standard benchmarks, i.e., CIFAR100 and ImageNet, under both similar-architecture and cross-architecture settings. The advantage is even more pronounced under the cross-architecture setting, where our method outperforms the state of the art CRD by an average of 2.3% in accuracy rate on CIFAR100 across six different teacher-student pairs.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2006.07114,
  title  = {Knowledge Distillation Meets Self-Supervision},
  author = {Guodong Xu and Ziwei Liu and Xiaoxiao Li and Chen Change Loy},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2006.07114},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

To appear in ECCV 2020. Code is available at: https://github.com/xuguodong03/SSKD

R2 v1 2026-06-23T16:16:22.689Z