Understanding the Role of Nonlinearity in Training Dynamics of Contrastive Learning
This provides foundational insights into why deep nonlinear models excel in self-supervised learning, addressing a key theoretical problem for machine learning researchers.
The paper tackles the theoretical gap in understanding self-supervised learning by analyzing how nonlinearity affects training dynamics in contrastive learning, showing that nonlinear activation leads to multiple local optima capturing diverse data patterns, unlike linear models which learn only one major pattern.
While the empirical success of self-supervised learning (SSL) heavily relies on the usage of deep nonlinear models, existing theoretical works on SSL understanding still focus on linear ones. In this paper, we study the role of nonlinearity in the training dynamics of contrastive learning (CL) on one and two-layer nonlinear networks with homogeneous activation $h(x) = h'(x)x$. We have two major theoretical discoveries. First, the presence of nonlinearity can lead to many local optima even in 1-layer setting, each corresponding to certain patterns from the data distribution, while with linear activation, only one major pattern can be learned. This suggests that models with lots of parameters can be regarded as a \emph{brute-force} way to find these local optima induced by nonlinearity. Second, in the 2-layer case, linear activation is proven not capable of learning specialized weights into diverse patterns, demonstrating the importance of nonlinearity. In addition, for 2-layer setting, we also discover \emph{global modulation}: those local patterns discriminative from the perspective of global-level patterns are prioritized to learn, further characterizing the learning process. Simulation verifies our theoretical findings.