- Majorization Minimization Technique for Optimally Solving Deep Dictionary Learning The concept of deep dictionary learning has been recently proposed. Unlike shallow dictionary learning which learns single level of dictionary to represent the data, it uses multiple layers of dictionaries. So far, the problem could only be solved in a greedy fashion; this was achieved by learning a single layer of dictionary in each stage where the coefficients from the previous layer acted as inputs to the subsequent layer (only the first layer used the training samples as inputs). This was not optimal; there was feedback from shallower to deeper layers but not the other way. This work proposes an optimal solution to deep dictionary learning whereby all the layers of dictionaries are solved simultaneously. We employ the Majorization Minimization approach. Experiments have been carried out on benchmark datasets; it shows that optimal learning indeed improves over greedy piecemeal learning. Comparison with other unsupervised deep learning tools (stacked denoising autoencoder, deep belief network, contractive autoencoder and K-sparse autoencoder) show that our method supersedes their performance both in accuracy and speed. 2 authors · Dec 11, 2019
34 Beyond Scaling Laws: Understanding Transformer Performance with Associative Memory Increasing the size of a Transformer model does not always lead to enhanced performance. This phenomenon cannot be explained by the empirical scaling laws. Furthermore, improved generalization ability occurs as the model memorizes the training samples. We present a theoretical framework that sheds light on the memorization process and performance dynamics of transformer-based language models. We model the behavior of Transformers with associative memories using Hopfield networks, such that each transformer block effectively conducts an approximate nearest-neighbor search. Based on this, we design an energy function analogous to that in the modern continuous Hopfield network which provides an insightful explanation for the attention mechanism. Using the majorization-minimization technique, we construct a global energy function that captures the layered architecture of the Transformer. Under specific conditions, we show that the minimum achievable cross-entropy loss is bounded from below by a constant approximately equal to 1. We substantiate our theoretical results by conducting experiments with GPT-2 on various data sizes, as well as training vanilla Transformers on a dataset of 2M tokens. 4 authors · May 14, 2024