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preprint

Deep Learning Works in Practice. But Does it Work in Theory?

Hoang, Lê Nguyên
•
Guerraoui, Rachid
2018

Deep learning relies on a very specific kind of neural networks: those superposing several neural layers. In the last few years, deep learning achieved major breakthroughs in many tasks such as image analysis, speech recognition, natural language processing, and so on. Yet, there is no theoretical explanation of this success. In particular, it is not clear why the deeper the network, the better it actually performs. We argue that the explanation is intimately connected to a key feature of the data collected from our surrounding universe to feed the machine learning algorithms: large non-parallelizable logical depth. Roughly speaking, we conjecture that the shortest computational descriptions of the universe are algorithms with inherently large computation times, even when a large number of computers are available for parallelization. Interestingly, this conjecture, combined with the folklore conjecture in theoretical computer science that $ P \neq NC$, explains the success of deep learning.

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Type
preprint
ArXiv ID

1801.10437

Author(s)
Hoang, Lê Nguyên
•
Guerraoui, Rachid
Date Issued

2018

Note

Comments: 6 pages, 4 figures

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
DCL  
Available on Infoscience
July 18, 2018
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/147401
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