Federico Bertoni

2papers

2 Papers

NCApr 17, 2021
Emergence of Lie symmetries in functional architectures learned by CNNs

Federico Bertoni, Noemi Montobbio, Alessandro Sarti et al.

In this paper we study the spontaneous development of symmetries in the early layers of a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) during learning on natural images. Our architecture is built in such a way to mimic the early stages of biological visual systems. In particular, it contains a pre-filtering step $\ell^0$ defined in analogy with the Lateral Geniculate Nucleus (LGN). Moreover, the first convolutional layer is equipped with lateral connections defined as a propagation driven by a learned connectivity kernel, in analogy with the horizontal connectivity of the primary visual cortex (V1). The layer $\ell^0$ shows a rotational symmetric pattern well approximated by a Laplacian of Gaussian (LoG), which is a well-known model of the receptive profiles of LGN cells. The convolutional filters in the first layer can be approximated by Gabor functions, in agreement with well-established models for the profiles of simple cells in V1. We study the learned lateral connectivity kernel of this layer, showing the emergence of orientation selectivity w.r.t. the learned filters. We also examine the association fields induced by the learned kernel, and show qualitative and quantitative comparisons with known group-based models of V1 horizontal connectivity. These geometric properties arise spontaneously during the training of the CNN architecture, analogously to the emergence of symmetries in visual systems thanks to brain plasticity driven by external stimuli.

NENov 14, 2019
LGN-CNN: a biologically inspired CNN architecture

Federico Bertoni, Giovanna Citti, Alessandro Sarti

In this paper we introduce a biologically inspired Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) architecture called LGN-CNN that has a first convolutional layer composed by a single filter that mimics the role of the Lateral Geniculate Nucleus (LGN). The first layer of the neural network shows a rotational symmetric pattern justified by the structure of the net itself that turns up to be an approximation of a Laplacian of Gaussian (LoG). The latter function is in turn a good approximation of the receptive field profiles (RFPs) of the cells in the LGN. The analogy with the visual system is established, emerging directly from the architecture of the neural network. A proof of rotation invariance of the first layer is given on a fixed LGN-CNN architecture and the computational results are shown. Thus, contrast invariance capability of the LGN-CNN is investigated and a comparison between the Retinex effects of the first layer of LGN-CNN and the Retinex effects of a LoG is provided on different images. A statistical study is done on the filters of the second convolutional layer with respect to biological data. In conclusion, the model we have introduced approximates well the RFPs of both LGN and V1 attaining similar behavior as regards long range connections of LGN cells that show Retinex effects.