Applied Mathematics Colloquium with John Wright, Columbia University

Tuesday, October 5, 2021
2:45 PM - 3:45 PM
Online Event
Add to Calendar

Link added to clipboard:

https://events.columbia.edu/cal/event/eventView.do?b=de&calPath=%2Fpublic%2Fcals%2FMainCal&guid=CAL-00bbdb71-7bbf4c64-017b-c047b541-00004c5devents@columbia.edu&recurrenceId=

This seminar will take place online. Please contact the APAM Department for the Zoom link.



Speaker: John Wright, Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering and Associate Professor of Applied Mathematics at Columbia University

Title: Deep Networks and the Multiple Manifold Problem

Abstract: Data with low-dimensional nonlinear structure are ubiquitous in engineering and scientific problems. We study a model problem with such structure—a binary classification task that uses a deep fully-connected neural network to classify data drawn from two disjoint smooth curves on the unit sphere. Aside from mild regularity conditions, we place no restrictions on the configuration of the curves. We prove that when (i) the network depth is large relative to certain geometric properties that set the difficulty of the problem and (ii) the network width and number of samples is polynomial in the depth, randomly-initialized gradient descent quickly learns to correctly classify all points on the two curves with high probability. To our knowledge, this is the first generalization guarantee for deep networks with nonlinear data that depends only on intrinsic data properties. Our analysis draws on ideas from harmonic analysis and martingale concentration for handling statistical dependencies in the initial (random) network. We sketch applications to invariant vision, and to gravitational wave astronomy, where leveraging low-dimensional structure leads to statistically optimal tests for identifying signals in noise.

Joint work with Sam Buchanan, Dar Gilboa, Tim Wang, Jingkai Yan

Speaker Bio: John Wright is an associate professor in Electrical Engineering at Columbia University. He is also affiliated with the Department of Applied Physics and Applied Mathematics and Columbia’s Data Science Institute. He received his PhD in Electrical Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign in 2009. Before joining Columbia he was with Microsoft Research Asia from 2009-2011. His research interests include sparse and low-dimensional models for high-dimensional data, optimization (convex and otherwise), and applications in imaging and vision. His work has received a number of awards and honors, including the 2012 COLT Best Paper Award and the 2015 PAMI TC Young Researcher Award. 

 

Event Contact Information:
APAM Department
[email protected]
LOCATION:
  • Online
TYPE:
  • Seminar
CATEGORY:
  • Engineering
EVENTS OPEN TO:
  • Public
BACK TO EVENTS

Date Navigation Widget

Filter By

Subscribe Export Options

Getting to Columbia

Other Calendars

Guests With Disabilities