Guided learning lets “untrainable” neural networks realize their potential

 



Even networks long considered “untrainable” can learn effectively with a bit of a helping hand. Researchers at MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) have shown that a brief period of alignment between neural networks, a method they call guidance, can dramatically improve the performance of architectures previously thought unsuitable for modern tasks.

Their findings suggest that many so-called “ineffective” networks may simply start from less-than-ideal starting points, and that short-term guidance can place them in a spot that makes learning easier for the network.

The team’s guidance method works by encouraging a target network to match the internal representations of a guide network during training. Unlike traditional methods like knowledge distillation, which focus on mimicking a teacher’s outputs, guidance transfers structural knowledge directly from one network to another. This means the target learns how the guide organizes information within each layer, rather than simply copying its behavior. Remarkably, even untrained networks contain architectural biases that can be transferred, while trained guides additionally convey learned patterns.

“We found these results pretty surprising,” says Vighnesh Subramaniam ’23, MEng ’24, MIT Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) PhD student and CSAIL researcher, who is a lead author on a paper presenting these findings. “It’s impressive that we could use representational similarity to make these traditionally ‘crappy’ networks actually work.”


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