Itay Golan

ML
5papers
1,208citations
Novelty59%
AI Score31

5 Papers

MLMar 27, 2018Code
Task Agnostic Continual Learning Using Online Variational Bayes

Chen Zeno, Itay Golan, Elad Hoffer et al.

Catastrophic forgetting is the notorious vulnerability of neural networks to the change of the data distribution while learning. This phenomenon has long been considered a major obstacle for allowing the use of learning agents in realistic continual learning settings. A large body of continual learning research assumes that task boundaries are known during training. However, research for scenarios in which task boundaries are unknown during training has been lacking. In this paper we present, for the first time, a method for preventing catastrophic forgetting (BGD) for scenarios with task boundaries that are unknown during training --- task-agnostic continual learning. Code of our algorithm is available at https://github.com/igolan/bgd.

MLOct 1, 2020
Task Agnostic Continual Learning Using Online Variational Bayes with Fixed-Point Updates

Chen Zeno, Itay Golan, Elad Hoffer et al.

Background: Catastrophic forgetting is the notorious vulnerability of neural networks to the changes in the data distribution during learning. This phenomenon has long been considered a major obstacle for using learning agents in realistic continual learning settings. A large body of continual learning research assumes that task boundaries are known during training. However, only a few works consider scenarios in which task boundaries are unknown or not well defined -- task agnostic scenarios. The optimal Bayesian solution for this requires an intractable online Bayes update to the weights posterior. Contributions: We aim to approximate the online Bayes update as accurately as possible. To do so, we derive novel fixed-point equations for the online variational Bayes optimization problem, for multivariate Gaussian parametric distributions. By iterating the posterior through these fixed-point equations, we obtain an algorithm (FOO-VB) for continual learning which can handle non-stationary data distribution using a fixed architecture and without using external memory (i.e. without access to previous data). We demonstrate that our method (FOO-VB) outperforms existing methods in task agnostic scenarios. FOO-VB Pytorch implementation will be available online.

LGFeb 20, 2020
Kernel and Rich Regimes in Overparametrized Models

Blake Woodworth, Suriya Gunasekar, Jason D. Lee et al.

A recent line of work studies overparametrized neural networks in the "kernel regime," i.e. when the network behaves during training as a kernelized linear predictor, and thus training with gradient descent has the effect of finding the minimum RKHS norm solution. This stands in contrast to other studies which demonstrate how gradient descent on overparametrized multilayer networks can induce rich implicit biases that are not RKHS norms. Building on an observation by Chizat and Bach, we show how the scale of the initialization controls the transition between the "kernel" (aka lazy) and "rich" (aka active) regimes and affects generalization properties in multilayer homogeneous models. We also highlight an interesting role for the width of a model in the case that the predictor is not identically zero at initialization. We provide a complete and detailed analysis for a family of simple depth-$D$ models that already exhibit an interesting and meaningful transition between the kernel and rich regimes, and we also demonstrate this transition empirically for more complex matrix factorization models and multilayer non-linear networks.

LGJun 13, 2019
Kernel and Rich Regimes in Overparametrized Models

Blake Woodworth, Suriya Gunasekar, Pedro Savarese et al.

A recent line of work studies overparametrized neural networks in the "kernel regime," i.e. when the network behaves during training as a kernelized linear predictor, and thus training with gradient descent has the effect of finding the minimum RKHS norm solution. This stands in contrast to other studies which demonstrate how gradient descent on overparametrized multilayer networks can induce rich implicit biases that are not RKHS norms. Building on an observation by Chizat and Bach, we show how the scale of the initialization controls the transition between the "kernel" (aka lazy) and "rich" (aka active) regimes and affects generalization properties in multilayer homogeneous models. We provide a complete and detailed analysis for a simple two-layer model that already exhibits an interesting and meaningful transition between the kernel and rich regimes, and we demonstrate the transition for more complex matrix factorization models and multilayer non-linear networks.

MLMar 5, 2018
Norm matters: efficient and accurate normalization schemes in deep networks

Elad Hoffer, Ron Banner, Itay Golan et al.

Over the past few years, Batch-Normalization has been commonly used in deep networks, allowing faster training and high performance for a wide variety of applications. However, the reasons behind its merits remained unanswered, with several shortcomings that hindered its use for certain tasks. In this work, we present a novel view on the purpose and function of normalization methods and weight-decay, as tools to decouple weights' norm from the underlying optimized objective. This property highlights the connection between practices such as normalization, weight decay and learning-rate adjustments. We suggest several alternatives to the widely used $L^2$ batch-norm, using normalization in $L^1$ and $L^\infty$ spaces that can substantially improve numerical stability in low-precision implementations as well as provide computational and memory benefits. We demonstrate that such methods enable the first batch-norm alternative to work for half-precision implementations. Finally, we suggest a modification to weight-normalization, which improves its performance on large-scale tasks.