SSL-OTA: Unveiling Backdoor Threats in Self-Supervised Learning for Object Detection
The extensive adoption of Self-supervised learning (SSL) has led to an increased security
threat from backdoor attacks. While existing research has mainly focused on backdoor
attacks in image classification, there has been limited exploration into their implications for
object detection. In this work, we propose the first backdoor attack designed for object
detection tasks in SSL scenarios, termed Object Transform Attack (SSL-OTA). SSL-OTA
employs a trigger capable of altering predictions of the target object to the desired category …
threat from backdoor attacks. While existing research has mainly focused on backdoor
attacks in image classification, there has been limited exploration into their implications for
object detection. In this work, we propose the first backdoor attack designed for object
detection tasks in SSL scenarios, termed Object Transform Attack (SSL-OTA). SSL-OTA
employs a trigger capable of altering predictions of the target object to the desired category …
The extensive adoption of Self-supervised learning (SSL) has led to an increased security threat from backdoor attacks. While existing research has mainly focused on backdoor attacks in image classification, there has been limited exploration into their implications for object detection. In this work, we propose the first backdoor attack designed for object detection tasks in SSL scenarios, termed Object Transform Attack (SSL-OTA). SSL-OTA employs a trigger capable of altering predictions of the target object to the desired category, encompassing two attacks: Data Poisoning Attack (NA) and Dual-Source Blending Attack (DSBA). NA conducts data poisoning during downstream fine-tuning of the object detector, while DSBA additionally injects backdoors into the pre-trained encoder. We establish appropriate metrics and conduct extensive experiments on benchmark datasets, demonstrating the effectiveness and utility of our proposed attack. Notably, both NA and DSBA achieve high attack success rates (ASR) at extremely low poisoning rates (0.5%). The results underscore the importance of considering backdoor threats in SSL-based object detection and contribute a novel perspective to the field.
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