MLLGSPDec 19, 2021

Information Field Theory and Artificial Intelligence

arXiv:2112.10133v36 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work proposes a novel integration of IFT with AI/ML, potentially enhancing inference methods for perception and reasoning tasks, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing frameworks.

The paper explores the relationship between Information Field Theory (IFT) and AI/ML, showing that IFT's Bayesian inference for signal reconstruction can be reformulated as training generative neural networks, enabling operation without pre-training by incorporating expert knowledge.

Information field theory (IFT), the information theory for fields, is a mathematical framework for signal reconstruction and non-parametric inverse problems. Artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) aim at generating intelligent systems including such for perception, cognition, and learning. This overlaps with IFT, which is designed to address perception, reasoning, and inference tasks. Here, the relation between concepts and tools in IFT and those in AI and ML research are discussed. In the context of IFT, fields denote physical quantities that change continuously as a function of space (and time) and information theory refers to Bayesian probabilistic logic equipped with the associated entropic information measures. Reconstructing a signal with IFT is a computational problem similar to training a generative neural network (GNN) in ML. In this paper, the process of inference in IFT is reformulated in terms of GNN training. In contrast to classical neural networks, IFT based GNNs can operate without pre-training thanks to incorporating expert knowledge into their architecture. Furthermore, the cross-fertilization of variational inference methods used in IFT and ML are discussed. These discussions suggests that IFT is well suited to address many problems in AI and ML research and application.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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