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Abstract
Adversarial training and its variants have become de facto standards for
learning robust deep neural networks. In this paper, we explore the landscape
around adversarial training in a bid to uncover its limits. We systematically
study the effect of different training losses, model sizes, activation
functions, the addition of unlabeled data (through pseudo-labeling) and other
factors on adversarial robustness. We discover that it is possible to train
robust models that go well beyond state-of-the-art results by combining larger
models, Swish/SiLU activations and model weight averaging. We demonstrate large
improvements on CIFAR-10 and CIFAR-100 against $\ell_\infty$ and $\ell_2$
norm-bounded perturbations of size $8/255$ and $128/255$, respectively. In the
setting with additional unlabeled data, we obtain an accuracy under attack of
65.88% against $\ell_\infty$ perturbations of size $8/255$ on CIFAR-10 (+6.35%
with respect to prior art). Without additional data, we obtain an accuracy
under attack of 57.20% (+3.46%). To test the generality of our findings and
without any additional modifications, we obtain an accuracy under attack of
80.53% (+7.62%) against $\ell_2$ perturbations of size $128/255$ on CIFAR-10,
and of 36.88% (+8.46%) against $\ell_\infty$ perturbations of size $8/255$ on
CIFAR-100. All models are available at
https://github.com/deepmind/deepmind-research/tree/master/adversarial_robustness.