Abstract:Recent advancements in unsupervised representation learning often leverage class information to enhance feature extraction and clustering performance. However, this reliance on class priors limits the applicability of such methods in real-world scenarios where class information is unavailable or ambiguous. In this paper, we propose Contrastive Disentangling (CD), a simple and effective framework that learns representations without any reliance on class priors. Our framework employs a multi-level contrastive learning strategy that combines instance-level and feature-level losses with a normalized entropy loss to learn semantically rich and fine-grained representations. Specifically, (1) the instance-level contrastive loss encourages the separation of feature representations for different samples, (2) the feature-level contrastive loss promotes independence among the feature head predictions, and (3) the normalized entropy loss encourages the feature heads to capture meaningful and prevalent attributes from the data. These components work together to enable CD to significantly outperform existing methods, as demonstrated by extensive experiments on benchmark datasets including CIFAR-10, CIFAR-100, STL-10, and ImageNet-10, particularly in scenarios where class priors are absent. The code is available at https://github.com/Hoper-J/Contrastive-Disentangling.