LGMLSep 26, 2023

SGD Finds then Tunes Features in Two-Layer Neural Networks with near-Optimal Sample Complexity: A Case Study in the XOR problem

arXiv:2309.15111v231 citationsh-index: 8
Originality Highly original
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This provides theoretical guarantees for efficiently learning a fundamental non-linear function with standard neural networks, addressing a key challenge in deep learning theory.

The paper tackles the problem of efficiently learning the quadratic XOR function with a two-layer neural network using minibatch SGD, achieving a population error of o(1) with d polylog(d) samples, which is near-optimal sample complexity.

In this work, we consider the optimization process of minibatch stochastic gradient descent (SGD) on a 2-layer neural network with data separated by a quadratic ground truth function. We prove that with data drawn from the $d$-dimensional Boolean hypercube labeled by the quadratic ``XOR'' function $y = -x_ix_j$, it is possible to train to a population error $o(1)$ with $d \:\text{polylog}(d)$ samples. Our result considers simultaneously training both layers of the two-layer-neural network with ReLU activations via standard minibatch SGD on the logistic loss. To our knowledge, this work is the first to give a sample complexity of $\tilde{O}(d)$ for efficiently learning the XOR function on isotropic data on a standard neural network with standard training. Our main technique is showing that the network evolves in two phases: a $\textit{signal-finding}$ phase where the network is small and many of the neurons evolve independently to find features, and a $\textit{signal-heavy}$ phase, where SGD maintains and balances the features. We leverage the simultaneous training of the layers to show that it is sufficient for only a small fraction of the neurons to learn features, since those neurons will be amplified by the simultaneous growth of their second layer weights.

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