Why Deep Neural Networks for Function Approximation?
October 13, 2016 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐ International Conference on Learning Representations
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Authors
Shiyu Liang, R. Srikant
arXiv ID
1610.04161
Category
cs.LG: Machine Learning
Cross-listed
cs.NE
Citations
403
Venue
International Conference on Learning Representations
Last Checked
3 months ago
Abstract
Recently there has been much interest in understanding why deep neural networks are preferred to shallow networks. We show that, for a large class of piecewise smooth functions, the number of neurons needed by a shallow network to approximate a function is exponentially larger than the corresponding number of neurons needed by a deep network for a given degree of function approximation. First, we consider univariate functions on a bounded interval and require a neural network to achieve an approximation error of $\varepsilon$ uniformly over the interval. We show that shallow networks (i.e., networks whose depth does not depend on $\varepsilon$) require $ฮฉ(\text{poly}(1/\varepsilon))$ neurons while deep networks (i.e., networks whose depth grows with $1/\varepsilon$) require $\mathcal{O}(\text{polylog}(1/\varepsilon))$ neurons. We then extend these results to certain classes of important multivariate functions. Our results are derived for neural networks which use a combination of rectifier linear units (ReLUs) and binary step units, two of the most popular type of activation functions. Our analysis builds on a simple observation: the multiplication of two bits can be represented by a ReLU.
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