Benign Overfitting in Adversarial Training for Vision Transformers

Published: 02 Mar 2026, Last Modified: 01 Apr 2026ICLR 2026 Workshop DATA-FMEveryoneRevisionsCC BY 4.0
Keywords: Learning Theory, Benign overfitting, Adversarial training, ViT
Abstract: Despite the remarkable success of Vision Transformers (ViTs) across a wide range of vision tasks, recent studies have revealed that they remain vulnerable to adversarial examples, much like Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs). A common empirical defense strategy is adversarial training, yet the theoretical underpinnings of its robustness in ViTs remain largely unexplored. In this work, we present the first theoretical analysis of adversarial training under simplified ViT architectures. We show that, when trained under a signal-to-noise ratio that satisfies a certain condition and within a moderate perturbation budget, adversarial training enables ViTs to achieve nearly zero robust training loss and robust generalization error under certain regimes. Remarkably, this leads to strong generalization even in the presence of overfitting, a phenomenon known as benign overfitting, previously only observed in CNNs (with adversarial training). Experiments on both synthetic and real-world datasets further validate our theoretical findings.
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Submission Number: 129
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