CLEVER score
From HandWiki
The CLEVER (Cross Lipschitz Extreme Value for nEtwork Robustness) score is a way of measuring the robustness of an artificial neural network towards adversarial attacks.[1] It was developed by a team at the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab in IBM Research and first presented at the 2018 International Conference on Learning Representations.[2] It was mentioned and reviewed by Ian Goodfellow[3] as well. It was adopted into a educational game Fool The Bank[4] by Narendra Nath Joshi,[5] Abhishek Bhandwaldar and Casey Dugan
References
- ↑ Weng, Tsui-Wei (2018). "Evaluating the robustness of neural networks: An extreme value theory approach". arXiv:1801.10578 [stat.ML].
- ↑ "A CLEVER Way to Resist Adversarial Attack". May 2, 2018. https://www.ibm.com/blogs/research/2018/05/clever-adversarial-attack/.
- ↑ "Evaluating the Robustness of Neural Networks: An Extreme Value Theory Approach". 10 February 2022. https://openreview.net/forum?id=BkUHlMZ0b.
- ↑ "Fool the Bank - IBM Research". https://foolthebank.mybluemix.net/.
- ↑ "Narendra Nath Joshi". http://nnjoshi.co.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CLEVER score.
Read more |