Yuzuru Sato

2papers

2 Papers

15.9LGApr 2
Dynamical structure of vanishing gradient and overfitting in multi-layer perceptrons

Alex Alì Maleknia, Yuzuru Sato

Vanishing gradient and overfitting are two of the most extensively studied problems in the literature about machine learning. However, they are frequently considered in some asymptotic setting, which obscure the underlying dynamical mechanisms responsible for their emergence. In this paper, we aim to provide a clear dynamical description of learning in multi-layer perceptrons. To this end, we introduce a minimal model, inspired by studies by Fukumizu and Amari, to investigate vanishing gradients and overfitting in MLPs trained via gradient descent. Within this model, we show that the learning dynamics may pass through plateau regions and near-optimal regions during training, both of which consist of saddle structures, before ultimately converging to the overfitting region. Under suitable conditions on the training dataset, we prove that, with high probability, the overfitting region collapses to a single attractor modulo symmetry, which corresponds to the overfitting. Moreover, we show that any MLP trained on a finite noisy dataset cannot converge to the theoretical optimum and instead necessarily converges to an overfitting solution.

AOAug 24, 2020
Noise-induced degeneration in online learning

Yuzuru Sato, Daiji Tsutsui, Akio Fujiwara

In order to elucidate the plateau phenomena caused by vanishing gradient, we herein analyse stability of stochastic gradient descent near degenerated subspaces in a multi-layer perceptron. In stochastic gradient descent for Fukumizu-Amari model, which is the minimal multi-layer perceptron showing non-trivial plateau phenomena, we show that (1) attracting regions exist in multiply degenerated subspaces, (2) a strong plateau phenomenon emerges as a noise-induced synchronisation, which is not observed in deterministic gradient descent, (3) an optimal fluctuation exists to minimise the escape time from the degenerated subspace. The noise-induced degeneration observed herein is expected to be found in a broad class of machine learning via neural networks.