Europe/Lisbon
Online

Joan Bruna

Joan Bruna, Courant Institute and Center for Data Science, NYU
Mathematical aspects of neural network learning through measure dynamics

High-dimensional learning remains an outstanding phenomena where experimental evidence outpaces our current mathematical understanding, mostly due to the recent empirical successes of Deep Learning algorithms. Neural Networks provide a rich yet intricate class of functions with statistical abilities to break the curse of dimensionality, and where physical priors can be tightly integrated into the architecture to improve sample efficiency. Despite these advantages, an outstanding theoretical challenge in these models is computational, ie providing an analysis that explains successful optimization and generalization in the face of existing worst-case computational hardness results.

In this talk, I will focus on the framework that lifts parameter optimization to an appropriate measure space. I will cover existing results that guarantee global convergence of the resulting Wasserstein gradient flows, as well as recent results that study typical fluctuations of the dynamics around their mean field evolution. We will also discuss extensions of this framework beyond vanilla supervised learning, to account for symmetries in the function, as well as for competitive optimization.

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Bruna's slides

Projecto FCT UIDB/04459/2020.