Deep neural networks have significantly improved the performance of low-level vision tasks but also increased the difficulty of interpretability. A deep understanding of deep models is beneficial for both network design and practical reliability. To take up this challenge, we introduce causality theory to interpret low-level vision models and propose a model-/task-agnostic method called Causal Effect Map (CEM). With CEM, we can visualize and quantify the input-output relationships on either positive or negative effects. After analyzing various low-level vision tasks with CEM, we have reached several interesting insights, such as: (1) Using more information of input images (e.g., larger receptive field) does NOT always yield positive outcomes. (2) Attempting to incorporate mechanisms with a global receptive field (e.g., channel attention) into image denoising may prove futile. (3) Integrating multiple tasks to train a general model could encourage the network to prioritize local information over global context. Based on the causal effect theory, the proposed diagnostic tool can refresh our common knowledge and bring a deeper understanding of low-level vision models. Codes are available at https://github.com/J-FHu/CEM.
Interpreting Low-level Vision Models with Causal Effect Maps
A Causal Effect Map (CEM) is introduced to interpret low-level vision models, providing insights into input-output relationships and challenging common assumptions about model design and training.
- Year
- 2024
- Venue
- arXiv 2024
- Authors
- 8
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2407.19789v3ARXIV-DEFAULT
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