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Alexander Binder

Alexander Binder contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

11 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Beyond Spatial Compression: Interface-Centric Generative States for Open-World 3D Structure

Current 3D tokenizers largely treat representation as spatial compression: compact codes reconstruct surface geometry, but leave component ownership and attachment validity implicit. In open-world assets with intersecting components, noisy topology, and weak canonical structure, this creates a representation mismatch: local shape, component identity, and assembly relations become entangled in a latent stream and are not natively addressable during decoding. We formulate an alternative view, interface-centric generative states, in which tokenization constructs an operational state rather than a passive compressed code. The state exposes local geometry, component ownership, and attachment validity as variables that can be queried, constrained, and repaired during decoding. We instantiate this formulation with Component-Conditioned Canonical Local Tokens (C2LT-3D), factorizing representation into canonical local geometry, partition-conditioned context, and relational seam variables. Each factor targets a distinct failure mode of compression-centric tokens: pose leakage, cross-component interference, or invalid local attachment. This exposed state supports attachment validation, latent structural repair, targeted intervention, and constrained serialization without a separate post-hoc structure recovery module. Trained on single-object CAD models and evaluated zero-shot on open-world multi-component assets, C2LT-3D improves structural robustness and shows that its latent variables remain actionable under adversarial attachment settings. These results suggest that open-world 3D generative representations should be evaluated not only by reconstruction fidelity, but by whether their discrete states remain operational for assembly-level structural reasoning.

preprint2022arXiv

Beyond Explaining: Opportunities and Challenges of XAI-Based Model Improvement

Explainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI) is an emerging research field bringing transparency to highly complex and opaque machine learning (ML) models. Despite the development of a multitude of methods to explain the decisions of black-box classifiers in recent years, these tools are seldomly used beyond visualization purposes. Only recently, researchers have started to employ explanations in practice to actually improve models. This paper offers a comprehensive overview over techniques that apply XAI practically for improving various properties of ML models, and systematically categorizes these approaches, comparing their respective strengths and weaknesses. We provide a theoretical perspective on these methods, and show empirically through experiments on toy and realistic settings how explanations can help improve properties such as model generalization ability or reasoning, among others. We further discuss potential caveats and drawbacks of these methods. We conclude that while model improvement based on XAI can have significant beneficial effects even on complex and not easily quantifyable model properties, these methods need to be applied carefully, since their success can vary depending on a multitude of factors, such as the model and dataset used, or the employed explanation method.

preprint2022arXiv

Discovering Transferable Forensic Features for CNN-generated Images Detection

Visual counterfeits are increasingly causing an existential conundrum in mainstream media with rapid evolution in neural image synthesis methods. Though detection of such counterfeits has been a taxing problem in the image forensics community, a recent class of forensic detectors -- universal detectors -- are able to surprisingly spot counterfeit images regardless of generator architectures, loss functions, training datasets, and resolutions. This intriguing property suggests the possible existence of transferable forensic features (T-FF) in universal detectors. In this work, we conduct the first analytical study to discover and understand T-FF in universal detectors. Our contributions are 2-fold: 1) We propose a novel forensic feature relevance statistic (FF-RS) to quantify and discover T-FF in universal detectors and, 2) Our qualitative and quantitative investigations uncover an unexpected finding: color is a critical T-FF in universal detectors. Code and models are available at https://keshik6.github.io/transferable-forensic-features/

preprint2022arXiv

Split and Expand: An inference-time improvement for Weakly Supervised Cell Instance Segmentation

We consider the problem of segmenting cell nuclei instances from Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) stains with weak supervision. While most recent works focus on improving the segmentation quality, this is usually insufficient for instance segmentation of cell instances clumped together or with a small size. In this work, we propose a two-step post-processing procedure, Split and Expand, that directly improves the conversion of segmentation maps to instances. In the Split step, we split clumps of cells from the segmentation map into individual cell instances with the guidance of cell-center predictions through Gaussian Mixture Model clustering. In the Expand step, we find missing small cells using the cell-center predictions (which tend to capture small cells more consistently as they are trained using reliable point annotations), and utilize Layer-wise Relevance Propagation (LRP) explanation results to expand those cell-center predictions into cell instances. Our Split and Expand post-processing procedure is training-free and is executed at inference-time only. To further improve the performance of our method, a feature re-weighting loss based on LRP is proposed. We test our procedure on the MoNuSeg and TNBC datasets and show that our proposed method provides statistically significant improvements on object-level metrics. Our code will be made available.

preprint2022arXiv

Toward Scalable and Unified Example-based Explanation and Outlier Detection

When neural networks are employed for high-stakes decision-making, it is desirable that they provide explanations for their prediction in order for us to understand the features that have contributed to the decision. At the same time, it is important to flag potential outliers for in-depth verification by domain experts. In this work we propose to unify two differing aspects of explainability with outlier detection. We argue for a broader adoption of prototype-based student networks capable of providing an example-based explanation for their prediction and at the same time identify regions of similarity between the predicted sample and the examples. The examples are real prototypical cases sampled from the training set via our novel iterative prototype replacement algorithm. Furthermore, we propose to use the prototype similarity scores for identifying outliers. We compare performances in terms of the classification, explanation quality, and outlier detection of our proposed network with other baselines. We show that our prototype-based networks beyond similarity kernels deliver meaningful explanations and promising outlier detection results without compromising classification accuracy.

preprint2021arXiv

Simple and Effective Prevention of Mode Collapse in Deep One-Class Classification

Anomaly detection algorithms find extensive use in various fields. This area of research has recently made great advances thanks to deep learning. A recent method, the deep Support Vector Data Description (deep SVDD), which is inspired by the classic kernel-based Support Vector Data Description (SVDD), is capable of simultaneously learning a feature representation of the data and a data-enclosing hypersphere. The method has shown promising results in both unsupervised and semi-supervised settings. However, deep SVDD suffers from hypersphere collapse -- also known as mode collapse, if the architecture of the model does not comply with certain architectural constraints, e.g. the removal of bias terms. These constraints limit the adaptability of the model and in some cases, may affect the model performance due to learning sub-optimal features. In this work, we consider two regularizers to prevent hypersphere collapse in deep SVDD. The first regularizer is based on injecting random noise via the standard cross-entropy loss. The second regularizer penalizes the minibatch variance when it becomes too small. Moreover, we introduce an adaptive weighting scheme to control the amount of penalization between the SVDD loss and the respective regularizer. Our proposed regularized variants of deep SVDD show encouraging results and outperform a prominent state-of-the-art method on a setup where the anomalies have no apparent geometrical structure.

preprint2020arXiv

Deep Semi-Supervised Anomaly Detection

Deep approaches to anomaly detection have recently shown promising results over shallow methods on large and complex datasets. Typically anomaly detection is treated as an unsupervised learning problem. In practice however, one may have---in addition to a large set of unlabeled samples---access to a small pool of labeled samples, e.g. a subset verified by some domain expert as being normal or anomalous. Semi-supervised approaches to anomaly detection aim to utilize such labeled samples, but most proposed methods are limited to merely including labeled normal samples. Only a few methods take advantage of labeled anomalies, with existing deep approaches being domain-specific. In this work we present Deep SAD, an end-to-end deep methodology for general semi-supervised anomaly detection. We further introduce an information-theoretic framework for deep anomaly detection based on the idea that the entropy of the latent distribution for normal data should be lower than the entropy of the anomalous distribution, which can serve as a theoretical interpretation for our method. In extensive experiments on MNIST, Fashion-MNIST, and CIFAR-10, along with other anomaly detection benchmark datasets, we demonstrate that our method is on par or outperforms shallow, hybrid, and deep competitors, yielding appreciable performance improvements even when provided with only little labeled data.

preprint2020arXiv

Exploring the Back Alleys: Analysing The Robustness of Alternative Neural Network Architectures against Adversarial Attacks

We investigate to what extent alternative variants of Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) are susceptible to adversarial attacks. We analyse the adversarial robustness of conventional, stochastic ANNs and Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs) in the raw image space, across three different datasets. Our experiments reveal that stochastic ANN variants are almost equally as susceptible as conventional ANNs when faced with simple iterative gradient-based attacks in the white-box setting. However we observe, that in black-box settings, stochastic ANNs are more robust than conventional ANNs, when faced with boundary attacks, transferability and surrogate attacks. Consequently, we propose improved attacks and defence mechanisms for stochastic ANNs in black-box settings. When performing surrogate-based black-box attacks, one can employ stochastic models as surrogates to observe higher attack success on both stochastic and deterministic targets. This success can be further improved with our proposed Variance Mimicking (VM) surrogate training method, against stochastic targets. Finally, adopting a defender's perspective, we investigate the plausibility of employing stochastic switching of model mixtures as a viable hardening mechanism. We observe that such a scheme does provide a partial hardening.

preprint2020arXiv

Resolving challenges in deep learning-based analyses of histopathological images using explanation methods

Deep learning has recently gained popularity in digital pathology due to its high prediction quality. However, the medical domain requires explanation and insight for a better understanding beyond standard quantitative performance evaluation. Recently, explanation methods have emerged, which are so far still rarely used in medicine. This work shows their application to generate heatmaps that allow to resolve common challenges encountered in deep learning-based digital histopathology analyses. These challenges comprise biases typically inherent to histopathology data. We study binary classification tasks of tumor tissue discrimination in publicly available haematoxylin and eosin slides of various tumor entities and investigate three types of biases: (1) biases which affect the entire dataset, (2) biases which are by chance correlated with class labels and (3) sampling biases. While standard analyses focus on patch-level evaluation, we advocate pixel-wise heatmaps, which offer a more precise and versatile diagnostic instrument and furthermore help to reveal biases in the data. This insight is shown to not only detect but also to be helpful to remove the effects of common hidden biases, which improves generalization within and across datasets. For example, we could see a trend of improved area under the receiver operating characteristic curve by 5% when reducing a labeling bias. Explanation techniques are thus demonstrated to be a helpful and highly relevant tool for the development and the deployment phases within the life cycle of real-world applications in digital pathology.

preprint2020arXiv

SideInfNet: A Deep Neural Network for Semi-Automatic Semantic Segmentation with Side Information

Fully-automatic execution is the ultimate goal for many Computer Vision applications. However, this objective is not always realistic in tasks associated with high failure costs, such as medical applications. For these tasks, semi-automatic methods allowing minimal effort from users to guide computer algorithms are often preferred due to desirable accuracy and performance. Inspired by the practicality and applicability of the semi-automatic approach, this paper proposes a novel deep neural network architecture, namely SideInfNet that effectively integrates features learnt from images with side information extracted from user annotations. To evaluate our method, we applied the proposed network to three semantic segmentation tasks and conducted extensive experiments on benchmark datasets. Experimental results and comparison with prior work have verified the superiority of our model, suggesting the generality and effectiveness of the model in semi-automatic semantic segmentation.

preprint2020arXiv

Towards Best Practice in Explaining Neural Network Decisions with LRP

Within the last decade, neural network based predictors have demonstrated impressive - and at times super-human - capabilities. This performance is often paid for with an intransparent prediction process and thus has sparked numerous contributions in the novel field of explainable artificial intelligence (XAI). In this paper, we focus on a popular and widely used method of XAI, the Layer-wise Relevance Propagation (LRP). Since its initial proposition LRP has evolved as a method, and a best practice for applying the method has tacitly emerged, based however on humanly observed evidence alone. In this paper we investigate - and for the first time quantify - the effect of this current best practice on feedforward neural networks in a visual object detection setting. The results verify that the layer-dependent approach to LRP applied in recent literature better represents the model's reasoning, and at the same time increases the object localization and class discriminativity of LRP.