GHOST: Gaussian Hypothesis Open-Set Technique

Authors

  • Ryan Rabinowitz University of Colorado, Colorado Springs
  • Steve Cruz University of Notre Dame
  • Manuel Günther University of Zurich
  • Terrance E. Boult University of Colorado, Colorado Springs

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v39i6.32715

Abstract

Evaluations of large-scale recognition methods typically focus on overall performance. While this approach is common, it often fails to provide insights into performance across individual classes, which can lead to fairness issues and misrepresentation. Addressing these gaps is crucial for accurately assessing how well methods handle novel or unseen classes and ensuring a fair evaluation. To address fairness in Open-Set Recognition (OSR), we demonstrate that per-class performance can vary dramatically. We introduce Gaussian Hypothesis Open Set Technique (GHOST), a novel hyperparameter-free algorithm that models deep features using class-wise multivariate Gaussian distributions with diagonal covariance matrices. We apply Z-score normalization to logits to mitigate the impact of feature magnitudes that deviate from the model’s expectations, thereby reducing the likelihood of the network assigning a high score to an unknown sample. We evaluate GHOST across multiple ImageNet-1K pre-trained deep networks and test it with four different unknown datasets. Using standard metrics such as AUOSCR, AUROC and FPR95, we achieve statistically significant improvements, advancing the state-of-the-art in large-scale OSR. Source code is provided online.

Published

2025-04-11

How to Cite

Rabinowitz, R., Cruz, S., Günther, M., & Boult, T. E. (2025). GHOST: Gaussian Hypothesis Open-Set Technique. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 39(6), 6666–6674. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v39i6.32715

Issue

Section

AAAI Technical Track on Computer Vision V