Recurrent Independent Mechanisms
September 24, 2019 Β· Declared Dead Β· π International Conference on Learning Representations
"No code URL or promise found in abstract"
Evidence collected by the PWNC Scanner
Authors
Anirudh Goyal, Alex Lamb, Jordan Hoffmann, Shagun Sodhani, Sergey Levine, Yoshua Bengio, Bernhard SchΓΆlkopf
arXiv ID
1909.10893
Category
cs.LG: Machine Learning
Cross-listed
cs.AI,
stat.ML
Citations
354
Venue
International Conference on Learning Representations
Last Checked
3 months ago
Abstract
Learning modular structures which reflect the dynamics of the environment can lead to better generalization and robustness to changes which only affect a few of the underlying causes. We propose Recurrent Independent Mechanisms (RIMs), a new recurrent architecture in which multiple groups of recurrent cells operate with nearly independent transition dynamics, communicate only sparingly through the bottleneck of attention, and are only updated at time steps where they are most relevant. We show that this leads to specialization amongst the RIMs, which in turn allows for dramatically improved generalization on tasks where some factors of variation differ systematically between training and evaluation.
Community Contributions
Found the code? Know the venue? Think something is wrong? Let us know!
π Similar Papers
In the same crypt β Machine Learning
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
XGBoost: A Scalable Tree Boosting System
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
Batch Normalization: Accelerating Deep Network Training by Reducing Internal Covariate Shift
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
Semi-Supervised Classification with Graph Convolutional Networks
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
Proximal Policy Optimization Algorithms
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
Exploring the Limits of Transfer Learning with a Unified Text-to-Text Transformer
Died the same way β π» Ghosted
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
Language Models are Few-Shot Learners
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
You Only Look Once: Unified, Real-Time Object Detection
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted
A Unified Approach to Interpreting Model Predictions
R.I.P.
π»
Ghosted