RoPINN: Region Optimized Physics-Informed Neural Networks
This addresses the problem of insufficient accuracy in PINNs for continuous domains, offering a practical improvement for researchers and practitioners in scientific computing and machine learning, though it is incremental as it builds on existing PINN methods.
The paper tackles the limitation of physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) in solving partial differential equations (PDEs) by proposing a region optimization paradigm that extends training from scattered points to continuous neighborhoods, which consistently boosts performance across diverse PDEs without extra computational overhead.
Physics-informed neural networks (PINNs) have been widely applied to solve partial differential equations (PDEs) by enforcing outputs and gradients of deep models to satisfy target equations. Due to the limitation of numerical computation, PINNs are conventionally optimized on finite selected points. However, since PDEs are usually defined on continuous domains, solely optimizing models on scattered points may be insufficient to obtain an accurate solution for the whole domain. To mitigate this inherent deficiency of the default scatter-point optimization, this paper proposes and theoretically studies a new training paradigm as region optimization. Concretely, we propose to extend the optimization process of PINNs from isolated points to their continuous neighborhood regions, which can theoretically decrease the generalization error, especially for hidden high-order constraints of PDEs. A practical training algorithm, Region Optimized PINN (RoPINN), is seamlessly derived from this new paradigm, which is implemented by a straightforward but effective Monte Carlo sampling method. By calibrating the sampling process into trust regions, RoPINN finely balances optimization and generalization error. Experimentally, RoPINN consistently boosts the performance of diverse PINNs on a wide range of PDEs without extra backpropagation or gradient calculation. Code is available at this repository: https://github.com/thuml/RoPINN.