Deep Machine Learning Reconstructing Lattice Topology with Strong Thermal Fluctuations

arXiv:2208.04119v1h-index: 18
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses a challenge in AI for science by enabling topology reconstruction in noisy, unbalanced data scenarios, though it is incremental as it applies deep learning to a specific physical model.

The authors tackled the problem of reconstructing lattice topology from time-dependent magnetic data under strong thermal fluctuations, achieving accurate reconstructions where traditional statistical methods fail.

Applying artificial intelligence to scientific problems (namely AI for science) is currently under hot debate. However, the scientific problems differ much from the conventional ones with images, texts, and etc., where new challenges emerges with the unbalanced scientific data and complicated effects from the physical setups. In this work, we demonstrate the validity of the deep convolutional neural network (CNN) on reconstructing the lattice topology (i.e., spin connectivities) in the presence of strong thermal fluctuations and unbalanced data. Taking the kinetic Ising model with Glauber dynamics as an example, the CNN maps the time-dependent local magnetic momenta (a single-node feature) evolved from a specific initial configuration (dubbed as an evolution instance) to the probabilities of the presences of the possible couplings. Our scheme distinguishes from the previous ones that might require the knowledge on the node dynamics, the responses from perturbations, or the evaluations of statistic quantities such as correlations or transfer entropy from many evolution instances. The fine tuning avoids the "barren plateau" caused by the strong thermal fluctuations at high temperatures. Accurate reconstructions can be made where the thermal fluctuations dominate over the correlations and consequently the statistic methods in general fail. Meanwhile, we unveil the generalization of CNN on dealing with the instances evolved from the unlearnt initial spin configurations and those with the unlearnt lattices. We raise an open question on the learning with unbalanced data in the nearly "double-exponentially" large sample space.

Foundations

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

Your Notes