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POSTPONED: Guest lecture by Prof. Helmut Bölcskei: Fundamental limits of learning in deep neural networks

New date will be announced later.

Due to the covid-19 situation, the lecture is postponed. New date will be announced later.

Fundamental limits of learning in deep neural networks

Prof. Helmut Bölcskei, ETH Zurich

If you wish to meet with the speaker or have any questions regarding his talk, please contact his host prof. Visa Koivunen, ELEC, [email protected]

Abstract

We develop a theory that allows to characterize the fundamental limits of learning in deep neural networks. Concretely, we consider Kolmogorov-optimal approximation through deep neural networks with the guiding theme being a relation between the epsilon-entropy of the hypothesis class to be learned and the complexity of the approximating network in terms of connectivity and memory requirements for storing the network topology and the quantized weights and biases. The theory we develop educes remarkable universality properties of deep networks. Specifically, deep networks can Kolmogorov-optimally learn essentially any hypothesis class. In addition, we find that deep networks provide exponential approximation accuracy—i.e., the approximation error decays exponentially in the number of non-zero weights in the network—of widely different functions including the multiplication operation, polynomials, sinusoidal functions, general smooth functions, and even one-dimensional oscillatory textures and fractal functions such as the Weierstrass function, both of which do not have any known methods achieving exponential approximation accuracy. We also show that in the approximation of sufficiently smooth functions finite-width deep networks require strictly smaller connectivity than finite-depth wide networks. We conclude with an outlook on the further role our theory could play.

Speaker Bio

Helmut Bölcskei was born in Mödling, Austria on May 29, 1970, and received the Dipl.-​Ing. and Dr. techn. degrees in electrical engineering from Vienna University of Technology, Vienna, Austria, in 1994 and 1997, respectively. In 1998 he was with Vienna University of Technology. From 1999 to 2001 he was a postdoctoral researcher in the Information Systems Laboratory, Department of Electrical Engineering, and in the Department of Statistics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA. He was in the founding team of Iospan Wireless Inc., a Silicon Valley-​based startup company (acquired by Intel Corporation in 2002) specialized in multiple-​input multiple-​output (MIMO) wireless systems for high-​speed Internet access, and was a co-​founder of Celestrius AG, Zurich, Switzerland. From 2001 to 2002 he was an Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-​Champaign. He has been with ETH Zurich since 2002, where he is a Professor of Mathematical Information Science in the Department of Electrical Engineering, also associated with the Department of Mathematics. He was a visiting researcher at Philips Research Laboratories Eindhoven, The Netherlands, ENST Paris, France, and the Heinrich Hertz Institute Berlin, Germany. His research interests are in applied mathematics, machine learning theory, mathematical signal processing, data science, and statistics.

He received the 2001 IEEE Signal Processing Society Young Author Best Paper Award, the 2006 IEEE Communications Society Leonard G. Abraham Best Paper Award, the 2010 Vodafone Innovations Award, the ETH "Golden Owl" Teaching Award, is a Fellow of the IEEE, a 2011 EURASIP Fellow, was a Distinguished Lecturer (2013-​2014) of the IEEE Information Theory Society, an Erwin Schrödinger Fellow (1999-​2001) of the Austrian National Science Foundation (FWF), was included in the 2014 Thomson Reuters List of Highly Cited Researchers in Computer Science, and is the 2016 Padovani Lecturer of the IEEE Information Theory Society. He served as an associate editor of the IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, the IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, the IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications, and the EURASIP Journal on Applied Signal Processing. He was editor-​in-chief of the IEEE Transactions on Information Theory during the period 2010-​2013 and served on the editorial board of the IEEE Signal Processing Magazine, "Foundations and Trends in Communication and Information Theory", and "Foundations and Trends in Networking". He was TPC co-​chair of the 2008 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory and the 2016 IEEE Information Theory Workshop and served on the Board of Governors of the IEEE Information Theory Society. He has been a delegate for faculty appointments of the president of ETH Zurich since 2008.

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