1,602 research outputs found
Deep Divergence-Based Approach to Clustering
A promising direction in deep learning research consists in learning
representations and simultaneously discovering cluster structure in unlabeled
data by optimizing a discriminative loss function. As opposed to supervised
deep learning, this line of research is in its infancy, and how to design and
optimize suitable loss functions to train deep neural networks for clustering
is still an open question. Our contribution to this emerging field is a new
deep clustering network that leverages the discriminative power of
information-theoretic divergence measures, which have been shown to be
effective in traditional clustering. We propose a novel loss function that
incorporates geometric regularization constraints, thus avoiding degenerate
structures of the resulting clustering partition. Experiments on synthetic
benchmarks and real datasets show that the proposed network achieves
competitive performance with respect to other state-of-the-art methods, scales
well to large datasets, and does not require pre-training steps
Investigation of inverse design of multilayer thin-films with conditional invertible Neural Networks
The task of designing optical multilayer thin-films regarding a given target is currently solved using gradient-based optimization in conjunction with methods that can introduce additional thin-film layers. Recently, Deep Learning and Reinforcement Learning have been been introduced to the task of designing thin-films with great success, however a trained network is usually only able to become proficient for a single target and must be retrained if the optical targets are varied. In this work, we apply conditional Invertible Neural Networks (cINN) to inversely designing multilayer thin-films given an optical target. Since the cINN learns the energy landscape of all thin-film configurations within the training dataset, we show that cINNs can generate a stochastic ensemble of proposals for thin-film configurations that that are reasonably close to the desired target depending only on random variables. By refining the proposed configurations further by a local optimization, we show that the generated thin-films reach the target with significantly greater precision than comparable state-of-the art approaches. Furthermore, we tested the generative capabilities on samples which are outside the training data distribution and found that the cINN was able to predict thin-films for out-of-distribution targets, too. The results suggest that in order to improve the generative design of thin-films, it is instructive to use established and new machine learning methods in conjunction in order to obtain the most favorable results
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Improved streamflow forecasting using self-organizing radial basis function artificial neural networks
Streamflow forecasting has always been a challenging task for water resources engineers and managers and a major component of water resources system control. In this study, we explore the applicability of a Self Organizing Radial Basis (SORB) function to one-step ahead forecasting of daily streamflow. SORB uses a Gaussian Radial Basis Function architecture in conjunction with the Self-Organizing Feature Map (SOFM) used in data classification. SORB outperforms the two other ANN algorithms, the well known Multi-layer Feedforward Network (MFN) and Self-Organizing Linear Output map (SOLO) neural network for simulation of daily streamflow in the semi-arid Salt River basin. The applicability of the linear regression model was also investigated and concluded that the regression model is not reliable for this study. To generalize the model and derive a robust parameter set, cross-validation is applied and its outcome is compared with the split sample test. Cross-validation justifies the validity of the nonlinear relationship set up between input and output data. © 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
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