LGNAMLJun 5, 2020

Structure preserving deep learning

arXiv:2006.03364v151 citations
AI Analysis

It addresses the challenge of mathematically grounding deep learning for researchers, but is incremental as it reviews existing directions rather than presenting new results.

The paper reviews mathematical approaches to understand and design deep learning methods that preserve specific structures, such as discretizations of dynamical systems, invertibility, group equivariance, and optimization frameworks based on conformal Hamiltonian systems and Riemannian manifolds.

Over the past few years, deep learning has risen to the foreground as a topic of massive interest, mainly as a result of successes obtained in solving large-scale image processing tasks. There are multiple challenging mathematical problems involved in applying deep learning: most deep learning methods require the solution of hard optimisation problems, and a good understanding of the tradeoff between computational effort, amount of data and model complexity is required to successfully design a deep learning approach for a given problem. A large amount of progress made in deep learning has been based on heuristic explorations, but there is a growing effort to mathematically understand the structure in existing deep learning methods and to systematically design new deep learning methods to preserve certain types of structure in deep learning. In this article, we review a number of these directions: some deep neural networks can be understood as discretisations of dynamical systems, neural networks can be designed to have desirable properties such as invertibility or group equivariance, and new algorithmic frameworks based on conformal Hamiltonian systems and Riemannian manifolds to solve the optimisation problems have been proposed. We conclude our review of each of these topics by discussing some open problems that we consider to be interesting directions for future research.

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