LGNAMLJan 27, 2023

Out-of-distributional risk bounds for neural operators with applications to the Helmholtz equation

ETH Zurich
arXiv:2301.11509v341 citationsh-index: 29
Originality Highly original
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This work addresses limitations in neural operators for high-frequency PDEs like the Helmholtz equation, offering improved generalization for inverse problems in computational physics.

The authors tackled the problem of neural operators performing poorly on high-frequency wave physics problems by proposing a transformer-inspired subfamily with stochastic depth, achieving superior performance both in-distribution and out-of-distribution compared to standard neural operators.

Despite their remarkable success in approximating a wide range of operators defined by PDEs, existing neural operators (NOs) do not necessarily perform well for all physics problems. We focus here on high-frequency waves to highlight possible shortcomings. To resolve these, we propose a subfamily of NOs enabling an enhanced empirical approximation of the nonlinear operator mapping wave speed to solution, or boundary values for the Helmholtz equation on a bounded domain. The latter operator is commonly referred to as the ''forward'' operator in the study of inverse problems. Our methodology draws inspiration from transformers and techniques such as stochastic depth. Our experiments reveal certain surprises in the generalization and the relevance of introducing stochastic depth. Our NOs show superior performance as compared with standard NOs, not only for testing within the training distribution but also for out-of-distribution scenarios. To delve into this observation, we offer an in-depth analysis of the Rademacher complexity associated with our modified models and prove an upper bound tied to their stochastic depth that existing NOs do not satisfy. Furthermore, we obtain a novel out-of-distribution risk bound tailored to Gaussian measures on Banach spaces, again relating stochastic depth with the bound. We conclude by proposing a hypernetwork version of the subfamily of NOs as a surrogate model for the mentioned forward operator.

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