Distribution-Dependent Analysis of Gibbs-ERM Principle

Abstract

Gibbs-ERM learning is a natural idealized model of learning with stochastic optimization algorithms (such as SGLD and \u2014to some extent\u2014 SGD), while it also arises in other contexts, including PAC-Bayesian theory, and sampling mechanisms. In this work we study the excess risk suffered by a Gibbs-ERM learner that uses non-convex, regularized empirical risk with the goal to understand the interplay between the data-generating distribution and learning in large hypothesis spaces. Our main results are emphdistribution-dependent upper bounds on several notions of excess risk. We show that, in all cases, the distribution-dependent excess risk is essentially controlled by the empheffective dimension exttrleft(oldsymbolHstar(oldsymbolHstar+lambdaoldsymbolI)βˆ’1ight) exttrleft(oldsymbolH^star (oldsymbolH^star + lambda oldsymbolI)^-1 ight) of the problem, where oldsymbolHstaroldsymbolH^star is the Hessian matrix of the risk at a local minimum. This is a well-established notion of effective dimension appearing in several previous works, including the analyses of SGD and ridge regression, but ours is the first work that brings this dimension to the analysis of learning using Gibbs densities. The distribution-dependent view we advocate here improves upon earlier results of Raginsky et al. 2017, and can yield much tighter bounds depending on the interplay between the data-generating distribution and the loss function. The first part of our analysis focuses on the emphlocalized excess risk in the vicinity of a fixed local minimizer. This result is then extended to bounds on the emphglobal excess risk, by characterizing probabilities of local minima (and their complement) under Gibbs densities, a results which might be of independent interest

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