Big Transfer (BiT)
The BiT model was proposed in Big Transfer (BiT): General Visual Representation Learning by Alexander Kolesnikov, Lucas Beyer, Xiaohua Zhai, Joan Puigcerver, Jessica Yung, Sylvain Gelly, Neil Houlsby. BiT is a simple recipe for scaling up pre-training of ResNet-like architectures (specifically, ResNetv2). The method results in significant improvements for transfer learning.
Disclaimer: The team releasing ResNet did not write a model card for this model so this model card has been written by the Hugging Face team.
Model description
The abstract from the paper is the following:
Transfer of pre-trained representations improves sample efficiency and simplifies hyperparameter tuning when training deep neural networks for vision. We revisit the paradigm of pre-training on large supervised datasets and fine-tuning the model on a target task. We scale up pre-training, and propose a simple recipe that we call Big Transfer (BiT). By combining a few carefully selected components, and transferring using a simple heuristic, we achieve strong performance on over 20 datasets. BiT performs well across a surprisingly wide range of data regimes -- from 1 example per class to 1M total examples. BiT achieves 87.5% top-1 accuracy on ILSVRC-2012, 99.4% on CIFAR-10, and 76.3% on the 19 task Visual Task Adaptation Benchmark (VTAB). On small datasets, BiT attains 76.8% on ILSVRC-2012 with 10 examples per class, and 97.0% on CIFAR-10 with 10 examples per class. We conduct detailed analysis of the main components that lead to high transfer performance.
Intended uses & limitations
You can use the raw model for image classification. See the model hub to look for fine-tuned versions on a task that interests you.
How to use
Here is how to use this model to classify an image of the COCO 2017 dataset into one of the 1,000 ImageNet classes:
from transformers import BitImageProcessor, BitForImageClassification
import torch
from datasets import load_dataset
dataset = load_dataset("huggingface/cats-image")
image = dataset["test"]["image"][0]
feature_extractor = BitImageProcessor.from_pretrained("google/bit-50")
model = BitForImageClassification.from_pretrained("google/bit-50")
inputs = feature_extractor(image, return_tensors="pt")
with torch.no_grad():
logits = model(**inputs).logits
# model predicts one of the 1000 ImageNet classes
predicted_label = logits.argmax(-1).item()
print(model.config.id2label[predicted_label
>>> tabby, tabby cat
For more code examples, we refer to the documentation.
BibTeX entry and citation info
@misc{https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1912.11370,
doi = {10.48550/ARXIV.1912.11370},
url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/1912.11370},
author = {Kolesnikov, Alexander and Beyer, Lucas and Zhai, Xiaohua and Puigcerver, Joan and Yung, Jessica and Gelly, Sylvain and Houlsby, Neil},
keywords = {Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (cs.CV), Machine Learning (cs.LG), FOS: Computer and information sciences, FOS: Computer and information sciences},
title = {Big Transfer (BiT): General Visual Representation Learning},
publisher = {arXiv},
year = {2019},
copyright = {arXiv.org perpetual, non-exclusive license}
}
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