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On Translation Invariance in CNNs: Convolutional Layers can Exploit Absolute Spatial Location
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In this paper we challenge the common assumption that convolutional layers in modern CNNs are translation invariant. We show that CNNs can and will exploit the absolute spatial location by learning filters that respond exclusively to particular absolute locations by exploiting image boundary effects. Because modern CNNs filters have a huge receptive field, these boundary effects operate even far from the image boundary, allowing the network to exploit absolute spatial location all over the image. We give a simple solution to remove spatial location encoding which improves translation invariance and thus gives a stronger visual inductive bias which particularly benefits small data sets. We broadly demonstrate these benefits on several architectures and various applications such as image classification, patch matching, and two video classification datasets.
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MICViT outperforms CNN and transformer baselines on brain age prediction from multimodal 3D MRI by combining modality-specific and cross-modal local/global attention across three heterogeneous datasets.
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