Wild Challenge
"Wild" in machine learning research refers to the challenge of applying models trained on curated datasets to real-world, unstructured data, characterized by noise, variability, and ambiguity. Current research focuses on adapting existing models (like NeRFs, transformers, and convolutional networks) and developing new architectures to handle this complexity, often incorporating techniques like contrastive learning, multimodal fusion, and test-time adaptation. This research is crucial for bridging the gap between laboratory settings and practical applications, improving the robustness and reliability of AI systems in diverse and unpredictable environments. The ultimate goal is to create more generalizable and robust AI systems capable of functioning effectively in the real world.
Papers
CLERA: A Unified Model for Joint Cognitive Load and Eye Region Analysis in the Wild
Li Ding, Jack Terwilliger, Aishni Parab, Meng Wang, Lex Fridman, Bruce Mehler, Bryan Reimer
Robust Wind Turbine Blade Segmentation from RGB Images in the Wild
Raül Pérez-Gonzalo, Andreas Espersen, Antonio Agudo
Inter-Annotator Agreement in the Wild: Uncovering Its Emerging Roles and Considerations in Real-World Scenarios
NamHyeok Kim, Chanjun Park
UniControl: A Unified Diffusion Model for Controllable Visual Generation In the Wild
Can Qin, Shu Zhang, Ning Yu, Yihao Feng, Xinyi Yang, Yingbo Zhou, Huan Wang, Juan Carlos Niebles, Caiming Xiong, Silvio Savarese, Stefano Ermon, Yun Fu, Ran Xu
From the Lab to the Wild: Affect Modeling via Privileged Information
Konstantinos Makantasis, Kosmas Pinitas, Antonios Liapis, Georgios N. Yannakakis