Cédric Bény

2papers

2 Papers

LGApr 23, 2019
Learning relevant features for statistical inference

Cédric Bény

Given two views of data, we consider the problem of finding the features of one view which can be most faithfully inferred from the other. We find that these are also the most correlated variables in the sense of deep canonical correlation analysis (DCCA). Moreover, we show that these variables can be used to construct a non-parametric representation of the implied joint probability distribution, which can be thought of as a classical version of the Schmidt decomposition of quantum states. This representation can be used to compute the expectations of functions over one view of data conditioned on the other, such as Bayesian estimators and their standard deviations. We test the approach using inference on occluded MNIST images, and show that our representation contains multiple modes. Surprisingly, when applied to supervised learning (one dataset consists of labels), this approach automatically provides regularization and faster convergence compared to the cross-entropy objective. We also explore using this approach to discover salient independent variables of a single dataset.

LGFeb 16, 2018
Inferring relevant features: from QFT to PCA

Cédric Bény

In many-body physics, renormalization techniques are used to extract aspects of a statistical or quantum state that are relevant at large scale, or for low energy experiments. Recent works have proposed that these features can be formally identified as those perturbations of the states whose distinguishability most resist coarse-graining. Here, we examine whether this same strategy can be used to identify important features of an unlabeled dataset. This approach indeed results in a technique very similar to kernel PCA (principal component analysis), but with a kernel function that is automatically adapted to the data, or "learned". We test this approach on handwritten digits, and find that the most relevant features are significantly better for classification than those obtained from a simple gaussian kernel.