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Learning nonlinear level sets for dimensionality reduction in function approximation...

by Guannan Zhang, Jiaxin Zhang, Jacob D Hinkle
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Journal Name
Proceedings of NeurIPS 2019
Book Title
Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 32 (NeurIPS 2019)
Publication Date
Page Numbers
13199 to 13208
Issue
1
Publisher Location
United States of America
Conference Name
NuerIPS 2019
Conference Location
Vancouver, Canada
Conference Sponsor
Neural Information Processing Systems Foundation
Conference Date

We developed a Nonlinear Level-set Learning (NLL) method for dimensionality reduction in high-dimensional function approximation with small data. This work is motivated by a variety of design tasks in real-world engineering applications, where practitioners would replace their computationally intensive physical models (e.g., high-resolution fluid simulators) with fast-to-evaluate predictive machine learning models, so as to accelerate the engineering design processes. There are two major challenges in constructing such predictive models: (a) high-dimensional inputs (e.g., many independent design parameters) and (b) small training data, generated by running extremely time-consuming simulations. Thus, reducing the input dimension is critical to alleviate the over-fitting issue caused by data insufficiency. Existing methods, including sliced inverse regression and active subspace approaches, reduce the input dimension by learning a linear coordinate transformation; our main contribution is to extend the transformation approach to a nonlinear regime. Specifically, we exploit reversible networks (RevNets) to learn nonlinear level sets of a high-dimensional function and parameterize its level sets in low-dimensional spaces. A new loss function was designed to utilize samples of the target functions' gradient to encourage the transformed function to be sensitive to only a few transformed coordinates. The NLL approach is demonstrated by applying it to three 2D functions and two 20D functions for showing the improved approximation accuracy with the use of nonlinear transformation, as well as to an 8D composite material design problem for optimizing the buckling-resistance performance of composite shells of rocket inter-stages.