NEAILGNCDec 31, 2021

Avoiding Catastrophe: Active Dendrites Enable Multi-Task Learning in Dynamic Environments

arXiv:2201.00042v259 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of AI systems struggling to adapt and learn continuously in changing environments, offering a novel architecture that bridges multi-task and continual learning, though it is incremental in combining biological insights with existing deep learning frameworks.

The paper tackles catastrophic forgetting in dynamic environments by introducing a biologically inspired neural network with active dendrites and sparse representations, achieving competitive results on both multi-task and continual learning benchmarks with minimal forgetting.

A key challenge for AI is to build embodied systems that operate in dynamically changing environments. Such systems must adapt to changing task contexts and learn continuously. Although standard deep learning systems achieve state of the art results on static benchmarks, they often struggle in dynamic scenarios. In these settings, error signals from multiple contexts can interfere with one another, ultimately leading to a phenomenon known as catastrophic forgetting. In this article we investigate biologically inspired architectures as solutions to these problems. Specifically, we show that the biophysical properties of dendrites and local inhibitory systems enable networks to dynamically restrict and route information in a context-specific manner. Our key contributions are as follows. First, we propose a novel artificial neural network architecture that incorporates active dendrites and sparse representations into the standard deep learning framework. Next, we study the performance of this architecture on two separate benchmarks requiring task-based adaptation: Meta-World, a multi-task reinforcement learning environment where a robotic agent must learn to solve a variety of manipulation tasks simultaneously; and a continual learning benchmark in which the model's prediction task changes throughout training. Analysis on both benchmarks demonstrates the emergence of overlapping but distinct and sparse subnetworks, allowing the system to fluidly learn multiple tasks with minimal forgetting. Our neural implementation marks the first time a single architecture has achieved competitive results on both multi-task and continual learning settings. Our research sheds light on how biological properties of neurons can inform deep learning systems to address dynamic scenarios that are typically impossible for traditional ANNs to solve.

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