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Large-width asymptotics for ReLU neural networks with $α$-Stable initializations (2206.08065v3)

Published 16 Jun 2022 in cs.LG, math.ST, stat.ML, and stat.TH

Abstract: There is a recent and growing literature on large-width asymptotic properties of Gaussian neural networks (NNs), namely NNs whose weights are initialized as Gaussian distributions. Two popular problems are: i) the study of the large-width distributions of NNs, which characterizes the infinitely wide limit of a rescaled NN in terms of a Gaussian stochastic process; ii) the study of the large-width training dynamics of NNs, which characterizes the infinitely wide dynamics in terms of a deterministic kernel, referred to as the neural tangent kernel (NTK), and shows that, for a sufficiently large width, the gradient descent achieves zero training error at a linear rate. In this paper, we consider these problems for $\alpha$-Stable NNs, namely NNs whose weights are initialized as $\alpha$-Stable distributions with $\alpha\in(0,2]$. First, for $\alpha$-Stable NNs with a ReLU activation function, we show that if the NN's width goes to infinity then a rescaled NN converges weakly to an $\alpha$-Stable stochastic process. As a difference with respect to the Gaussian setting, our result shows that the choice of the activation function affects the scaling of the NN, that is: to achieve the infinitely wide $\alpha$-Stable process, the ReLU activation requires an additional logarithmic term in the scaling with respect to sub-linear activations. Then, we study the large-width training dynamics of $\alpha$-Stable ReLU-NNs, characterizing the infinitely wide dynamics in terms of a random kernel, referred to as the $\alpha$-Stable NTK, and showing that, for a sufficiently large width, the gradient descent achieves zero training error at a linear rate. The randomness of the $\alpha$-Stable NTK is a further difference with respect to the Gaussian setting, that is: within the $\alpha$-Stable setting, the randomness of the NN at initialization does not vanish in the large-width regime of the training.

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