LGDGApr 22, 2024

Deep Learning as Ricci Flow

arXiv:2404.14265v16 citationsh-index: 6Sci Rep
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the explainability problem in deep learning by introducing geometric tools, but it appears incremental as it builds on existing ideas of geometric simplification in neural networks.

The paper tackles the problem of understanding geometric transformations in deep neural networks with non-smooth activation functions like ReLU, proposing a parallel to Hamilton's Ricci flow and showing that a measure of this flow correlates with accuracy across various network architectures and datasets.

Deep neural networks (DNNs) are powerful tools for approximating the distribution of complex data. It is known that data passing through a trained DNN classifier undergoes a series of geometric and topological simplifications. While some progress has been made toward understanding these transformations in neural networks with smooth activation functions, an understanding in the more general setting of non-smooth activation functions, such as the rectified linear unit (ReLU), which tend to perform better, is required. Here we propose that the geometric transformations performed by DNNs during classification tasks have parallels to those expected under Hamilton's Ricci flow - a tool from differential geometry that evolves a manifold by smoothing its curvature, in order to identify its topology. To illustrate this idea, we present a computational framework to quantify the geometric changes that occur as data passes through successive layers of a DNN, and use this framework to motivate a notion of `global Ricci network flow' that can be used to assess a DNN's ability to disentangle complex data geometries to solve classification problems. By training more than $1,500$ DNN classifiers of different widths and depths on synthetic and real-world data, we show that the strength of global Ricci network flow-like behaviour correlates with accuracy for well-trained DNNs, independently of depth, width and data set. Our findings motivate the use of tools from differential and discrete geometry to the problem of explainability in deep learning.

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