--- library_name: tf-keras license: apache-2.0 tags: - image-classification --- # Train a Vision Transformer on small datasets Author: [Aritra Roy Gosthipaty](https://twitter.com/ariG23498) [Keras Blog](https://keras.io/examples/vision/vit_small_ds/) | [Colab Notebook](https://colab.research.google.com/github/keras-team/keras-io/blob/master/examples/vision/ipynb/vit_small_ds.ipynb) In the academic paper [An Image is Worth 16x16 Words: Transformers for Image Recognition at Scale](https://arxiv.org/abs/2010.11929), the authors mention that Vision Transformers (ViT) are data-hungry. Therefore, pretraining a ViT on a large-sized dataset like JFT300M and fine-tuning it on medium-sized datasets (like ImageNet) is the only way to beat state-of-the-art Convolutional Neural Network models. The self-attention layer of ViT lacks locality inductive bias (the notion that image pixels are locally correlated and that their correlation maps are translation-invariant). This is the reason why ViTs need more data. On the other hand, CNNs look at images through spatial sliding windows, which helps them get better results with smaller datasets. In the academic paper [Vision Transformer for Small-Size Datasets](https://arxiv.org/abs/2112.13492v1), the authors set out to tackle the problem of locality inductive bias in ViTs. The main ideas are: - Shifted Patch Tokenization - Locality Self Attention # Use the pre-trained model The model is pre-trained on the CIFAR100 dataset with the following hyperparameters: ```python # DATA NUM_CLASSES = 100 INPUT_SHAPE = (32, 32, 3) BUFFER_SIZE = 512 BATCH_SIZE = 256 # AUGMENTATION IMAGE_SIZE = 72 PATCH_SIZE = 6 NUM_PATCHES = (IMAGE_SIZE // PATCH_SIZE) ** 2 # OPTIMIZER LEARNING_RATE = 0.001 WEIGHT_DECAY = 0.0001 # TRAINING EPOCHS = 50 # ARCHITECTURE LAYER_NORM_EPS = 1e-6 TRANSFORMER_LAYERS = 8 PROJECTION_DIM = 64 NUM_HEADS = 4 TRANSFORMER_UNITS = [ PROJECTION_DIM * 2, PROJECTION_DIM, ] MLP_HEAD_UNITS = [ 2048, 1024 ] ``` I have used the `AdamW` optimizer with cosine decay learning schedule. You can find the entire implementation in the keras blog post. To use the pretrained model: ```python loaded_model = from_pretrained_keras("keras-io/vit-small-ds") _, accuracy, top_5_accuracy = loaded_model.evaluate(test_ds) print(f"Test accuracy: {round(accuracy * 100, 2)}%") print(f"Test top 5 accuracy: {round(top_5_accuracy * 100, 2)}%") ``` For an indepth understanding of the model uploading and downloading process one can refer to this [colab notebook](https://colab.research.google.com/drive/1nCMhefqySzG2p8wyXhmeAX5urddQXt49?usp=sharing). Important: The data augmentation pipeline is excluded from the model. TensorFlow `2.7` has a weird issue of serializaiton with augmentation pipeline. You can follow [this GitHub issue](https://github.com/huggingface/huggingface_hub/issues/593) for more updates. To send images through the model, one needs to make use of the `tf.data` and `map` API to map the augmentation.