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Resonator Networks, 2: Factorization Performance and Capacity Compared to Optimization-Based Methods
Author(s) -
Spencer J. Kent,
E. Paxon Frady,
Friedrich T. Sommer,
Bruno A. Olshausen
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
neural computation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.235
H-Index - 169
eISSN - 1530-888X
pISSN - 0899-7667
DOI - 10.1162/neco_a_01329
Subject(s) - resonator , superposition principle , artificial neural network , hopfield network , computer science , factorization , convergence (economics) , nonlinear system , optimization problem , mathematical optimization , algorithm , mathematics , artificial intelligence , physics , mathematical analysis , quantum mechanics , optics , economics , economic growth
We develop theoretical foundations of resonator networks, a new type of recurrent neural network introduced in Frady, Kent, Olshausen, and Sommer (2020), a companion article in this issue, to solve a high-dimensional vector factorization problem arising in Vector Symbolic Architectures. Given a composite vector formed by the Hadamard product between a discrete set of high-dimensional vectors, a resonator network can efficiently decompose the composite into these factors. We compare the performance of resonator networks against optimization-based methods, including Alternating Least Squares and several gradient-based algorithms, showing that resonator networks are superior in several important ways. This advantage is achieved by leveraging a combination of nonlinear dynamics and searching in superposition, by which estimates of the correct solution are formed from a weighted superposition of all possible solutions. While the alternative methods also search in superposition, the dynamics of resonator networks allow them to strike a more effective balance between exploring the solution space and exploiting local information to drive the network toward probable solutions. Resonator networks are not guaranteed to converge, but within a particular regime they almost always do. In exchange for relaxing the guarantee of global convergence, resonator networks are dramatically more effective at finding factorizations than all alternative approaches considered.

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