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Generalization and Stability of Interpolating Neural Networks with Minimal Width

Published 18 Feb 2023 in stat.ML and cs.LG | (2302.09235v2)

Abstract: We investigate the generalization and optimization properties of shallow neural-network classifiers trained by gradient descent in the interpolating regime. Specifically, in a realizable scenario where model weights can achieve arbitrarily small training error $\epsilon$ and their distance from initialization is $g(\epsilon)$, we demonstrate that gradient descent with $n$ training data achieves training error $O(g(1/T)2 /T)$ and generalization error $O(g(1/T)2 /n)$ at iteration $T$, provided there are at least $m=\Omega(g(1/T)4)$ hidden neurons. We then show that our realizable setting encompasses a special case where data are separable by the model's neural tangent kernel. For this and logistic-loss minimization, we prove the training loss decays at a rate of $\tilde O(1/ T)$ given polylogarithmic number of neurons $m=\Omega(\log4 (T))$. Moreover, with $m=\Omega(\log{4} (n))$ neurons and $T\approx n$ iterations, we bound the test loss by $\tilde{O}(1/n)$. Our results differ from existing generalization outcomes using the algorithmic-stability framework, which necessitate polynomial width and yield suboptimal generalization rates. Central to our analysis is the use of a new self-bounded weak-convexity property, which leads to a generalized local quasi-convexity property for sufficiently parameterized neural-network classifiers. Eventually, despite the objective's non-convexity, this leads to convergence and generalization-gap bounds that resemble those found in the convex setting of linear logistic regression.

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