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A Theoretical Understanding of Shallow Vision Transformers: Learning, Generalization, and Sample Complexity

ICLR

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Published on

05/05/2023

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ICLR

Vision Transformers (ViTs) with self-attention modules have recently achieved great empirical success in many vision tasks. Due to non-convex interactions across layers, however, the theoretical learning and generalization analysis is mostly elusive. Based on a data model characterizing both label-relevant and label-irrelevant tokens, this paper provides the first theoretical analysis of training a three-layer ViT, i.e., one self-attention layer followed by a two-layer perceptron, for a classification task. We characterize the sample complexity to achieve a zero generalization error. Our sample complexity bound is positively correlated with the inverse of the fraction of label-relevant tokens, the token noise level, and the initial model error. We also prove that a training process using stochastic gradient descent (SGD) leads to a sparse attention map, which is a formal verification of the general intuition about the success of attention. Moreover, this paper indicates that a proper token sparsification can improve the test performance by removing label-irrelevant and/or noisy tokens, including spurious correlations. Empirical experiments on synthetic data and CIFAR-10 dataset justify our theoretical results and generalize to deeper ViTs.

Please cite our work using the BibTeX below.

@inproceedings{
li2023a,
title={A Theoretical Understanding of Shallow Vision Transformers: Learning, Generalization, and Sample Complexity},
author={Hongkang Li and Meng Wang and Sijia Liu and Pin-Yu Chen},
booktitle={The Eleventh International Conference on Learning Representations },
year={2023},
url={https://openreview.net/forum?id=jClGv3Qjhb}
}
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