Publication | Open Access
Fundamental Tradeoffs between Invariance and Sensitivity to Adversarial Perturbations
29
Citations
15
References
2020
Year
Artificial IntelligenceFundamental TradeoffsAdversarial ExamplesEngineeringMachine LearningData ScienceUncertainty QuantificationInformation SecurityAttack ModelAdversarial Machine LearningAi SafetyRobustness (Computer Science)Computer ScienceMalicious InputsSmall PerturbationsData Security
Adversarial examples are malicious inputs crafted to induce misclassification. Commonly studied sensitivity-based adversarial examples introduce semantically-small changes to an input that result in a different model prediction. This paper studies a complementary failure mode, invariance-based adversarial examples, that introduce minimal semantic changes that modify an input's true label yet preserve the model's prediction. We demonstrate fundamental tradeoffs between these two types of adversarial examples. We show that defenses against sensitivity-based attacks actively harm a model's accuracy on invariance-based attacks, and that new approaches are needed to resist both attack types. In particular, we break state-of-the-art adversarially-trained and certifiably-robust models by generating small perturbations that the models are (provably) robust to, yet that change an input's class according to human labelers. Finally, we formally show that the existence of excessively invariant classifiers arises from the presence of overly-robust predictive features in standard datasets.
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