Attention Bootstrapping for Multi-Modal Test-Time Adaptation

Authors

  • Yusheng Zhao State Key Laboratory for Multimedia Information Processing, School of Computer Science, PKU-Anker LLM Lab, Peking University, Beijing, China
  • Junyu Luo State Key Laboratory for Multimedia Information Processing, School of Computer Science, PKU-Anker LLM Lab, Peking University, Beijing, China
  • Xiao Luo Department of Computer Science, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
  • Jinsheng Huang State Key Laboratory for Multimedia Information Processing, School of Computer Science, PKU-Anker LLM Lab, Peking University, Beijing, China
  • Jingyang Yuan State Key Laboratory for Multimedia Information Processing, School of Computer Science, PKU-Anker LLM Lab, Peking University, Beijing, China
  • Zhiping Xiao Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
  • Ming Zhang State Key Laboratory for Multimedia Information Processing, School of Computer Science, PKU-Anker LLM Lab, Peking University, Beijing, China

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v39i21.34446

Abstract

Test-time adaptation aims to adapt a well-trained model to potential distribution shifts at test time using only unlabeled test data, without access to the original training data. While previous efforts mainly focus on a single modality, test-time distribution shift in the multi-modal setting is more complex and calls for new solutions. This paper tackles the problem of multi-modal test-time adaptation by proposing a novel method named Attention Bootstrapping with Principal Entropy Minimization (ABPEM). We observe that test-time distribution shift causes misalignment across modalities, leading to a large gap between intra-modality discrepancies (measured by self-attention) and inter-modality discrepancies (measured by cross-attention). We name this the attention gap. This attention gap widens with more severe distribution shifts, hindering effective modality fusion. To mitigate this attention gap and encourage better modality fusion, we propose attention bootstrapping that promotes cross-attention with the guidance of self-attention. Moreover, to reduce the gradient noise in the commonly-used entropy minimization, we adopt principal entropy minimization, a refinement of entropy minimization that reduces gradient noise by focusing on the principal parts of entropy, excluding less reliable gradient information. Extensive experiments on the benchmarks validate the effectiveness of the proposed ABPEM in comparison with competing baselines.

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Published

2025-04-11

How to Cite

Zhao, Y., Luo, J., Luo, X., Huang, J., Yuan, J., Xiao, Z., & Zhang, M. (2025). Attention Bootstrapping for Multi-Modal Test-Time Adaptation. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 39(21), 22849–22857. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v39i21.34446

Issue

Section

AAAI Technical Track on Machine Learning VII