基于梯度的抽象任务表征推理,促进神经网络的泛化

Ali Hummos, Felipe del Río, Brabeeba Mien Wang, Julio Hurtado, Cristian B. Calderon, Guangyu Robert Yang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

人类和许多动物都表现出了极强的适应性,可以根据其内部目标对相同的输入做出不同的反应。大脑不仅代表了执行计算所需的中间抽象,而且还积极地维护着计算本身的表征(任务抽象)。这种计算与抽象的分离与更快的学习速度、灵活的决策和广泛的概括能力有关。我们研究了这种优势是否可以扩展到使用任务抽象训练的神经网络。要想获得这些优势,我们需要一种具备两种关键能力的任务推理机制:首先,当任务不再明确提供时,推断抽象任务表征的能力(任务推断);其次,操纵任务表征以适应新问题的能力(任务重组)。为了解决这个问题,我们从变分推理的角度将任务推理视为一个优化问题,并将我们的方法建立在期望最大化框架的基础上。我们证明,通过神经网络将梯度反向传播到任务表示层是推断当前任务需求的有效启发式方法,我们将这一过程称为基于梯度的推理(GBI)。通过对任务表示层的进一步迭代优化,可以重新组合抽象概念,以适应新的环境。通过使用一个玩具示例、一个新颖的图像分类器和一个语言模型,我们证明了 GBI 能够提供更高的学习效率和对新任务的泛化能力,并能限制遗忘。此外,我们还证明了 GBI 的独特优势,如保留不确定性估计信息和检测超出分布范围的样本。
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Gradient-based inference of abstract task representations for generalization in neural networks
Humans and many animals show remarkably adaptive behavior and can respond differently to the same input depending on their internal goals. The brain not only represents the intermediate abstractions needed to perform a computation but also actively maintains a representation of the computation itself (task abstraction). Such separation of the computation and its abstraction is associated with faster learning, flexible decision-making, and broad generalization capacity. We investigate if such benefits might extend to neural networks trained with task abstractions. For such benefits to emerge, one needs a task inference mechanism that possesses two crucial abilities: First, the ability to infer abstract task representations when no longer explicitly provided (task inference), and second, manipulate task representations to adapt to novel problems (task recomposition). To tackle this, we cast task inference as an optimization problem from a variational inference perspective and ground our approach in an expectation-maximization framework. We show that gradients backpropagated through a neural network to a task representation layer are an efficient heuristic to infer current task demands, a process we refer to as gradient-based inference (GBI). Further iterative optimization of the task representation layer allows for recomposing abstractions to adapt to novel situations. Using a toy example, a novel image classifier, and a language model, we demonstrate that GBI provides higher learning efficiency and generalization to novel tasks and limits forgetting. Moreover, we show that GBI has unique advantages such as preserving information for uncertainty estimation and detecting out-of-distribution samples.
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