Diego Febbe

LG
5papers
4citations
Novelty49%
AI Score41

5 Papers

LGSep 20, 2024
Deterministic versus stochastic dynamical classifiers: opposing random adversarial attacks with noise

Lorenzo Chicchi, Duccio Fanelli, Diego Febbe et al.

The Continuous-Variable Firing Rate (CVFR) model, widely used in neuroscience to describe the intertangled dynamics of excitatory biological neurons, is here trained and tested as a veritable dynamically assisted classifier. To this end the model is supplied with a set of planted attractors which are self-consistently embedded in the inter-nodes coupling matrix, via its spectral decomposition. Learning to classify amounts to sculp the basin of attraction of the imposed equilibria, directing different items towards the corresponding destination target, which reflects the class of respective pertinence. A stochastic variant of the CVFR model is also studied and found to be robust to aversarial random attacks, which corrupt the items to be classified. This remarkable finding is one of the very many surprising effects which arise when noise and dynamical attributes are made to mutually resonate.

LGMar 30
Spectral Higher-Order Neural Networks

Gianluca Peri, Timoteo Carletti, Duccio Fanelli et al.

Neural networks are fundamental tools of modern machine learning. The standard paradigm assumes binary interactions (across feedforward linear passes) between inter-tangled units, organized in sequential layers. Generalized architectures have been also designed that move beyond pairwise interactions, so as to account for higher-order couplings among computing neurons. Higher-order networks are however usually deployed as augmented graph neural networks (GNNs), and, as such, prove solely advantageous in contexts where the input exhibits an explicit hypergraph structure. Here, we present Spectral Higher-Order Neural Networks (SHONNs), a new algorithmic strategy to incorporate higher-order interactions in general-purpose, feedforward, network structures. SHONNs leverages a reformulation of the model in terms of spectral attributes. This allows to mitigate the common stability and parameter scaling problems that come along weighted, higher-order, forward propagations.

DIS-NNMay 11
Exact Fixed-Point Constraints in Neural-ODEs with Provable Universality

Feliciano Giuseppe Pacifico, Duccio Fanelli, Lorenzo Buffoni et al.

We introduce a technique that enables Neural-ODEs to approximate arbitrary velocity fields with a priori planted fixed-points. Specifically, a recipe is given to explicitly accommodate for a finite collection of points in the reference multi-dimensional space of the Neural-ODE where the velocity field is exactly equal to zero. In this way, the gradient-based training is rigorously constrained inside the prescribed hypothesis class while leaving the expressive power of the Neural-ODE unaltered. We rigorously prove the universality of the Neural-ODE under any local constraints in the velocity field and give a computationally convenient way of imposing the fixed points. Our method is then tested on two paradigmatic physical models.

NCJun 24, 2024
Learning in Wilson-Cowan model for metapopulation

Raffaele Marino, Lorenzo Buffoni, Lorenzo Chicchi et al.

The Wilson-Cowan model for metapopulation, a Neural Mass Network Model, treats different subcortical regions of the brain as connected nodes, with connections representing various types of structural, functional, or effective neuronal connectivity between these regions. Each region comprises interacting populations of excitatory and inhibitory cells, consistent with the standard Wilson-Cowan model. By incorporating stable attractors into such a metapopulation model's dynamics, we transform it into a learning algorithm capable of achieving high image and text classification accuracy. We test it on MNIST and Fashion MNIST, in combination with convolutional neural networks, on CIFAR-10 and TF-FLOWERS, and, in combination with a transformer architecture (BERT), on IMDB, always showing high classification accuracy. These numerical evaluations illustrate that minimal modifications to the Wilson-Cowan model for metapopulation can reveal unique and previously unobserved dynamics.

LGJun 3, 2024
Estimating Global Input Relevance and Enforcing Sparse Representations with a Scalable Spectral Neural Network Approach

Lorenzo Chicchi, Lorenzo Buffoni, Diego Febbe et al.

In machine learning practice it is often useful to identify relevant input features. Isolating key input elements, ranked according their respective degree of relevance, can help to elaborate on the process of decision making. Here, we propose a novel method to estimate the relative importance of the input components for a Deep Neural Network. This is achieved by leveraging on a spectral re-parametrization of the optimization process. Eigenvalues associated to input nodes provide in fact a robust proxy to gauge the relevance of the supplied entry features. Notably, the spectral features ranking is performed automatically, as a byproduct of the network training, with no additional processing to be carried out. Moreover, by leveraging on the regularization of the eigenvalues, it is possible to enforce solutions making use of a minimum subset of the input components, increasing the explainability of the model and providing sparse input representations. The technique is compared to the most common methods in the literature and is successfully challenged against both synthetic and real data.