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Main Authors: Schlisselberg, Ofir, Darshan, Ran
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.06300
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author Schlisselberg, Ofir
Darshan, Ran
author_facet Schlisselberg, Ofir
Darshan, Ran
contents In traditional machine learning, models are defined by a set of parameters, which are optimized to perform specific tasks. In neural networks, these parameters correspond to the synaptic weights. However, in reality, it is often infeasible to control or update all weights. This challenge is not limited to artificial networks but extends to biological networks, such as the brain, where the extent of distributed synaptic weight modification during learning remains unclear. Motivated by these insights, we theoretically investigate how different allocations of a fixed number of learnable weights influence the capacity of neural networks. Using a teacher-student setup, we introduce a benchmark to quantify the expressivity associated with each allocation. We establish conditions under which allocations have maximal or minimal expressive power in linear recurrent neural networks and linear multi-layer feedforward networks. For suboptimal allocations, we propose heuristic principles to estimate their expressivity. These principles extend to shallow ReLU networks as well. Finally, we validate our theoretical findings with empirical experiments. Our results emphasize the critical role of strategically distributing learnable weights across the network, showing that a more widespread allocation generally enhances the network's expressive power.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2502_06300
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The impact of allocation strategies in subset learning on the expressive power of neural networks
Schlisselberg, Ofir
Darshan, Ran
Machine Learning
In traditional machine learning, models are defined by a set of parameters, which are optimized to perform specific tasks. In neural networks, these parameters correspond to the synaptic weights. However, in reality, it is often infeasible to control or update all weights. This challenge is not limited to artificial networks but extends to biological networks, such as the brain, where the extent of distributed synaptic weight modification during learning remains unclear. Motivated by these insights, we theoretically investigate how different allocations of a fixed number of learnable weights influence the capacity of neural networks. Using a teacher-student setup, we introduce a benchmark to quantify the expressivity associated with each allocation. We establish conditions under which allocations have maximal or minimal expressive power in linear recurrent neural networks and linear multi-layer feedforward networks. For suboptimal allocations, we propose heuristic principles to estimate their expressivity. These principles extend to shallow ReLU networks as well. Finally, we validate our theoretical findings with empirical experiments. Our results emphasize the critical role of strategically distributing learnable weights across the network, showing that a more widespread allocation generally enhances the network's expressive power.
title The impact of allocation strategies in subset learning on the expressive power of neural networks
topic Machine Learning
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.06300