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Abstract
For machine learning models to be reliable and trustworthy, their decisions
must be interpretable. As these models find increasing use in safety-critical
applications, it is important that not just the model predictions but also
their explanations (as feature attributions) be robust to small
human-imperceptible input perturbations. Recent works have shown that many
attribution methods are fragile and have proposed improvements in either these
methods or the model training. We observe two main causes for fragile
attributions: first, the existing metrics of robustness (e.g., top-k
intersection) over-penalize even reasonable local shifts in attribution,
thereby making random perturbations to appear as a strong attack, and second,
the attribution can be concentrated in a small region even when there are
multiple important parts in an image. To rectify this, we propose simple ways
to strengthen existing metrics and attribution methods that incorporate
locality of pixels in robustness metrics and diversity of pixel locations in
attributions. Towards the role of model training in attributional robustness,
we empirically observe that adversarially trained models have more robust
attributions on smaller datasets, however, this advantage disappears in larger
datasets. Code is available at https://github.com/ksandeshk/LENS.