HEP-EXLGFeb 1, 2022

Improving Parametric Neural Networks for High-Energy Physics (and Beyond)

arXiv:2202.00424v56 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses signal-background classification for particle discovery in High-Energy Physics, presenting incremental improvements to existing methods.

The authors tackled the problem of signal-background classification in High-Energy Physics by improving Parametric Neural Networks (pNNs), proposing an AffinePNN architecture and a balanced training procedure, which they evaluated on the HEPMASS dataset and a new imbalanced version, showing enhanced classification performance and interpolation capability.

Signal-background classification is a central problem in High-Energy Physics (HEP), that plays a major role for the discovery of new fundamental particles. A recent method -- the Parametric Neural Network (pNN) -- leverages multiple signal mass hypotheses as an additional input feature to effectively replace a whole set of individual classifiers, each providing (in principle) the best response for the corresponding mass hypothesis. In this work we aim at deepening the understanding of pNNs in light of real-world usage. We discovered several peculiarities of parametric networks, providing intuition, metrics, and guidelines to them. We further propose an alternative parametrization scheme, resulting in a new parametrized neural network architecture: the AffinePNN; along with many other generally applicable improvements, like the balanced training procedure. Finally, we extensively and empirically evaluate our models on the HEPMASS dataset, along its imbalanced version (called HEPMASS-IMB) we provide here for the first time, to further validate our approach. Provided results are in terms of the impact of the proposed design decisions, classification performance, and interpolation capability, as well.

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