LGJul 14, 2023
A Quantitative Approach to Predicting Representational Learning and Performance in Neural NetworksRyan Pyle, Sebastian Musslick, Jonathan D. Cohen et al.
A key property of neural networks (both biological and artificial) is how they learn to represent and manipulate input information in order to solve a task. Different types of representations may be suited to different types of tasks, making identifying and understanding learned representations a critical part of understanding and designing useful networks. In this paper, we introduce a new pseudo-kernel based tool for analyzing and predicting learned representations, based only on the initial conditions of the network and the training curriculum. We validate the method on a simple test case, before demonstrating its use on a question about the effects of representational learning on sequential single versus concurrent multitask performance. We show that our method can be used to predict the effects of the scale of weight initialization and training curriculum on representational learning and downstream concurrent multitasking performance.
LGMar 13, 2025
The Spectral Bias of Shallow Neural Network Learning is Shaped by the Choice of Non-linearityJustin Sahs, Ryan Pyle, Fabio Anselmi et al.
Despite classical statistical theory predicting severe overfitting, modern massively overparameterized neural networks still generalize well. This unexpected property is attributed to the network's so-called implicit bias, which describes its propensity to converge to solutions that generalize effectively, among the many possible that correctly label the training data. The aim of our research is to explore this bias from a new perspective, focusing on how non-linear activation functions contribute to shaping it. First, we introduce a reparameterization which removes a continuous weight rescaling symmetry. Second, in the kernel regime, we leverage this reparameterization to generalize recent findings that relate shallow Neural Networks to the Radon transform, deriving an explicit formula for the implicit bias induced by a broad class of activation functions. Specifically, by utilizing the connection between the Radon transform and the Fourier transform, we interpret the kernel regime's inductive bias as minimizing a spectral seminorm that penalizes high-frequency components, in a manner dependent on the activation function. Finally, in the adaptive regime, we demonstrate the existence of local dynamical attractors that facilitate the formation of clusters of hyperplanes where the input to a neuron's activation function is zero, yielding alignment between many neurons' response functions. We confirm these theoretical results with simulations. All together, our work provides a deeper understanding of the mechanisms underlying the generalization capabilities of overparameterized neural networks and its relation with the implicit bias, offering potential pathways for designing more efficient and robust models.
LGAug 4, 2020
Shallow Univariate ReLu Networks as Splines: Initialization, Loss Surface, Hessian, & Gradient Flow DynamicsJustin Sahs, Ryan Pyle, Aneel Damaraju et al.
Understanding the learning dynamics and inductive bias of neural networks (NNs) is hindered by the opacity of the relationship between NN parameters and the function represented. We propose reparametrizing ReLU NNs as continuous piecewise linear splines. Using this spline lens, we study learning dynamics in shallow univariate ReLU NNs, finding unexpected insights and explanations for several perplexing phenomena. We develop a surprisingly simple and transparent view of the structure of the loss surface, including its critical and fixed points, Hessian, and Hessian spectrum. We also show that standard weight initializations yield very flat functions, and that this flatness, together with overparametrization and the initial weight scale, is responsible for the strength and type of implicit regularization, consistent with recent work arXiv:1906.05827. Our implicit regularization results are complementary to recent work arXiv:1906.07842, done independently, which showed that initialization scale critically controls implicit regularization via a kernel-based argument. Our spline-based approach reproduces their key implicit regularization results but in a far more intuitive and transparent manner. Going forward, our spline-based approach is likely to extend naturally to the multivariate and deep settings, and will play a foundational role in efforts to understand neural networks. Videos of learning dynamics using a spline-based visualization are available at http://shorturl.at/tFWZ2.
MLJun 19, 2020
Local Convolutions Cause an Implicit Bias towards High Frequency Adversarial ExamplesJosue Ortega Caro, Yilong Ju, Ryan Pyle et al.
Adversarial Attacks are still a significant challenge for neural networks. Recent work has shown that adversarial perturbations typically contain high-frequency features, but the root cause of this phenomenon remains unknown. Inspired by theoretical work on linear full-width convolutional models, we hypothesize that the local (i.e. bounded-width) convolutional operations commonly used in current neural networks are implicitly biased to learn high frequency features, and that this is one of the root causes of high frequency adversarial examples. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed the impact of different choices of linear and nonlinear architectures on the implicit bias of the learned features and the adversarial perturbations, in both spatial and frequency domains. We find that the high-frequency adversarial perturbations are critically dependent on the convolution operation because the spatially-limited nature of local convolutions induces an implicit bias towards high frequency features. The explanation for the latter involves the Fourier Uncertainty Principle: a spatially-limited (local in the space domain) filter cannot also be frequency-limited (local in the frequency domain). Furthermore, using larger convolution kernel sizes or avoiding convolutions (e.g. by using Vision Transformers architecture) significantly reduces this high frequency bias, but not the overall susceptibility to attacks. Looking forward, our work strongly suggests that understanding and controlling the implicit bias of architectures will be essential for achieving adversarial robustness.
NCMar 8, 2018
A model of reward-modulated motor learning with parallelcortical and basal ganglia pathwaysRyan Pyle, Robert Rosenbaum
Many recent studies of the motor system are divided into two distinct approaches: Those that investigate how motor responses are encoded in cortical neurons' firing rate dynamics and those that study the learning rules by which mammals and songbirds develop reliable motor responses. Computationally, the first approach is encapsulated by reservoir computing models, which can learn intricate motor tasks and produce internal dynamics strikingly similar to those of motor cortical neurons, but rely on biologically unrealistic learning rules. The more realistic learning rules developed by the second approach are often derived for simplified, discrete tasks in contrast to the intricate dynamics that characterize real motor responses. We bridge these two approaches to develop a biologically realistic learning rule for reservoir computing. Our algorithm learns simulated motor tasks on which previous reservoir computing algorithms fail, and reproduces experimental findings including those that relate motor learning to Parkinson's disease and its treatment.